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The^News and Advertising Medinm of Southern AlberU^s Sugar District 


70L. 27 


SATMOND. ALBIRTA. FRIDAY. ADO 81 1928 


HO. SO 


World Series Baseball 

Will soon be on the air. Be prepared to get every 
play with one of our fine Radios. Get Market Re-- 
ports and Concerts right in your own home. We 

are agents for the 

Atwater^Kent and Splitdorf Radios 


News Notes 


R. S. A. Will Open 


Free Installation 


See Us Today 


Kin^ Motors 


L. D. King 


Raymond 


False Teeth 


Why not have your false teeth cleaned 
and repolished? It makes them more 
sanitary and prolongs their life. The 
cost is only $2.00. Done while you 


' About 80 oars were iu tlie motor 

tour of the Herald-Sugar Factory lUymond Provincial School 

15-ton Beet Club oil Thursday of of Agrioulture will open for the 

last week. Among those in the 1928-29 term on October 30, irre- 

motoro^e were W. ^*‘^y** epective of rumors to the contrary. 
Utah Repubhoan candidate for t..-™.. i •. u » i « -i 
governor, Mark An.tiii and other , I •'•‘"much a. it hae been defJiut- 

prominent sugar company officials. ®ly deeWed by the Provincial De- 

The excursion started at Raymond, partment of Agriculture to contin- 

met U. 1. D. delegatee at Welling, ue the operation of the Raymond 

joined Ivothbridge and Coaldale school fw at least anotber term, it 
membere at the C. P. R. farm at • a-*, t 

Coaldale, and were met by the '* 

Taher-Barn well members at a tSyaaeist in obtaining a eat- 

point between those two towns, isfactoty enrolment. Due to the 
The largest field visited was that unfavosablc weather and harvest- 

of the Valgardwn brothera, who i„g conditions which prevailed 
have a beet acreage of 180 acres, t u e tnn-r .i i 

Luncheon wa. ^rved at Taber, ^unng the fall of 1»27, the enrol- 

The trip was a wonderful suooess first year Htudeiiia at the 

and was instructive, a promoter of B. 8. A. was greatly reduced, 
enthusiasm, and entertaining. This small enrolment will be re- 

Dehlin Bennett sold his Chevro- "mall second year 

let light delivery to J. W. Evan. l«28-21t. 

and has purchased a new Federal *® therefore important that 

truck. staff, but every per- 

son who is interested in the H. 8. 
The road grading program now * ^ • w • i 

, . ..A. and agriculture in general, 

being carried out by the council . j m ai. .. 

, , , • .. • should endeavor to focus the at- 


includes more than four miles of . » 

, ^ tention of the young i>eople of 

work. This program takes in the ah . * 1 . i 

• . a -. . southern Alberta upon the eduoa- 

fotir main outlets of the town, also .. , l i *- r a« o j 

.. j 1 . -j » j 1 tional possibilities of the Haymotid 


the roads each side of* and paral- o ■ . « . . ,a 

, 1 . 1 ,. j ai. . ochool of Agriculture, 

lei to, Broadway, and the road ... . .-t « a a j a 

« J a a. «a . AtUast tQ first-year students 
west from Broadway to the Stake u u u ,, j r a, 

. should be siirolled for the coming 

House. This work will improve . . nr a-c * 

, frsshman year. We are satified 

road conditions in town immeasur- .i. . au- i # a , a 

. .aa . • . a. that this number of Btudeiits can 

ably. Frank Leav.tt.. domg the g_ 


wait 


Dr. H. Harcourt Heal 


Raymond I job. 


Eat At The Club 

- We are installing a new 

Frigidaire Refrigerator 

which will protect the food 

served at our tables 

#» 

THE CLUB CAFE 

The Best Place To Eat 


* * tory. Therefore, let us all pull 

Bora-A daughter to Mr. and t«««»‘'er to obtain the uecesBary 
Mrs. Irvin Fawns. enrolment. We have done it be- 

fore: we can do it again. 

Joe Durume, blacksmith at the Longman, 

suffar factory, narrowlv oscai>ed Principal. 


School starts next Tuesday. 


Arlo Palmer purchased a new 
Ford roadster last Tuesday from 


Opera House 

Tonight and Saturday 

■THIL RALSTON IN 

Something Always Happens 


MONDAY NEXT 
WM. HAINI8 IN 

Westpoint 


COMING FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NBXT 

' Zane Grey^s 

Vanishing Pioneer 

(Filmed in Utah) 


Watch for the gala opening oi 

Brewerton^s Capitol 


■■ ■ ■ 

Harvest Clothes 

Gloves, Overalls, Smocks, Underwear, 

Shoes, Sox, Etc. 

Let us supply your needs 

Fall Suit Samples have arrived 

The Broadway Store 


Our Business Has Grown 

Thanks To Our Pleased Patrons 

We have made good clothes 
and we are endeavoring (o 
uphold our reputation 

We handle nothing but the best obtain^ 
able. Our Fall Suits and Overcoats are 
of the very latest in texture and style. 

Speciall Arrived Today; 

Our complete stock of samples of 

Imported Goods 

in Suits and Overcoats from the Old 
Country. Cloths that were never shown 
in the town before 


Joe Durume, blacksmith at the Longman, I 

= Let US supply your needs 

ed a boiler to make repairs and was ^ j 

.. Pall suit samples have arrived 

and fresh air soon restored him. 

The boiler was aired and Mr. D.ir- Tuesday. _ A 'WETJM Y7 A 

ume went back to work, but was . . , 1116 Cwjr wi? 

Arlo Palmer purchased a new 

forced to make another hasty exit, _ . , .am. * 

a. . a. . a J V . Ford roadster last Tuesday from W ^ 

this time unassisted, when water 

was turned into the boiler in er- Motors. ' 

ror. A new eleotrict sign for Brew- The new pool elevator here is The Club cafe installed a new 

The Class Leader's Convention ••‘ton’s Capitol theatre arrived now in operation, with Ray Woolf Fiigidaire refrigerator last Tues- 
forthe Raymond 1st, Raymond >“"t Tuesday. Work on the inter- in charge. He will move his fam- day at a cost of »700. Lee, the 
2nd and Welling wai^s will be the theatre is proceeding ily here next week from Cardston. owner, is evidently trying to keep 

held at the Stake House on T.ies- r»picHy- The walls are plastered, abreast of the times, 

day, September 4 at 2 p. m. the ceiling finished and the cement Pool elevators are now being 

Moor nearly finished. It wont be completed at Stirling and Crad- Born—A sou to Mr. and Mrs. 


Mss. G. Staker arrived here long now! 
Wednesday from Idaho to visit — 

with her relatives, Mr. and Mrs, J, 

C. Titteworth. 

Cardston won the first game of 
the Provincial Intermediate base¬ 
ball finals from Carstairs, on the 
latter’s diamond, last Monday by 
a score of 2—1. The second game 
was played at Cardston last night. 

Miss Lula Paris has accepted a 
position with the local branch of 
the Standard Bank. 


dock. 


Mike Kosko, at Lethbridge. 





OOl. 


are 


i3DeClRl 1 vea i oaay: T. K. Roberts, ooutraotor, re- I 

■ ■ ■■■ ■ ports a busy season. Mrs. Mc¬ 

Bride’s residence, which was moved 

Our complete stock of samples of j into town recently, from the farm, I 

. is now ready for occupancy, and 

M the reiuodelling of the lower floor 

of Mis. V. B. Redd’s house is near- 
» ing ctunpletiou, after ^ which Mr. 

in Suits and Overcoats from the Old Roberts will begin the construction 

of an addition to the residence of 

Country, Cloths that were never shown trank Haii. 
in the town before 

^ of the CaiNlstoii constitueuey, and 

AOl^C for many yeara prominent in pub- 

lie life in Alberta, passed away 
Home of Fine Tailoring last Saturday at his home in Card- 

RAYMOND ALBERTA tie was father to DeVoe 

Woolf, former high bchuol princi¬ 
pal here, Golden Woolf, present 
r ~ high school principal at Magrath, 

i AI.E - A liu'iie number Deal Mendenhall now drives a and was grandfather to Bay 

i.i t I l uit Jars, cht ap.—Ap- new Ileo truck and Andy Sorenson Woulf, agent for the local Pool el- 

piy to .Mrs. Annie Corless. - a new International truck. evator. Mi's. Woolf and other 

sons ami daughters survive. 

With tine weather openingTues- Mrs. Jai. Liukous, her daughter o j i « 

uioruiug harvesting is again on in Gladys, and son, Mel, arrived here *** , "*'* mutua s wi 

tull swing. on Tuesdsy from PortUud. ^ 

* day in the 2nd ward chapel. 




F 

fei 


M \j f 

'Em 


Gel Your School Supplies From Us 


Pens, Drawing Pencils, Copying Pencils, Pen Nibs, 
Rulers, Erasers, Scribblers of all kinds, Ink, Fount- 
tain Pen and India Ink, Loose Leaf Scribblers and 
Refills, Exam Tablets, Memo Pads, Drawing Pads. 

l-PwMA ^#.s.9l^h Paris nnAn «>nc] .. '.lOc 


RAYMOND 


ALBERTA 


80-Page Scratch Pads, open end.. .lOc 

“The Rival,” a 20-page Scribbler with heavy 
smooth paper, ruled, -heavy oiled back ... 10c 

Freel Chocolate Bar with every 60c cash pulrchase of 
school supplies. Also Script with every cash purchase 

Bennett & Co., Limited 



THE EECORDEK. RAYMOND, ALTA. 



Big Land Deal 


is dood tea 


The Orange Pekoe is 

something extra—a special tea 

In cUan^ bright Aluminum 


Trn ThoiiKiuKl Arrpn Of FiirnilnK i 
fjind I^iirrha^od In \Vnlnnrl||hf 
UUtHrt 

Whftt Ib BtRtrd to t)e the larifoat ' 
turn! deal rvor ronBuinnmtod In 
Northern Alberta wna completed 
here when the Mld-Weat Htwrlrp- 
nient ami Kinnnce C’orpnrRtlon ptir- 
chiiFoiI 10.000 ftcres of choice ffiitn-j 
ln>r land In the \Valnwri<»ht I^lstrlct 
at a price of $200,000. There are 3.- | 
000 acrcB under /uUlvatlon and Ihe^ 
land l« laid out In twenty unltB whUti, 
are iK'In^ rented by prourcHBlve farm -1 
eiH. 


MITST TAKK IIF.ST 


An Important Experiment 


UrlMKOti’ ten thousand of the vast army of unemployed Hrilish mlnerB 
t.' assist in IvuvestInK Western ('anada'a I02S ^lain crops la an experiment 
I'll a lars:e acale that will bo watched wMi pnat interest and sympathy 
not on’y in t'anada and Ihitain. hut throughout the Kmpire. That it is nn 


ST. VITUS DANCE 


A Trouble That Uusually Attacks 

Young Children 

St. Vitos Dance Is the name gen¬ 
erally given to a disease described 
by medical men as chorea. 



CUT PLUG 


SMOKING TOBACCO 

IN PACKAGES AND ' 2 LB. TINS 

.////AZ/y/r yy/ iwy/ /mii/'H/ii (indtniJdlabiKdis 


Laying Heavy Steel Rails 

C'.r.U. Keplaclng Ralln With Heavier 
.Steel On Maple f’reek luid 
ItrnolcN SiibdIvUlona 
Good progress Is being made with 
the relaying of steel on the Cana¬ 
dian I’aclflc lines In the Calgary di¬ 
vision during the past few montns. 
One hniulretl and thirly-flve miles of 

Vimomit Haldane, 72. former lord', been laid on tbe Maple 


Farm CrMiHt 


Tbla rtianoellor and .eeretary of -late for ' auWIvlalon, that Is between 

Medicine Hat and Swift Current, 


ixpcilinent confronted by many dlthcultles and not free from dangers Is trouble usually attackM young chil- HI has been ordered to 

l.illv rnoognized. but in view of Canada’s present need for harvest hands, dreii. though older people may he ’ 

a,M- .••.aam s serious and apparently unso.vab.e probtem of unemptoyment, tt a twUeb!n« T"t’be ' -- 

Is one well worth \vhi!e face and limbs. As the disease pro- 

CnquosUoiiably there ha.s arisen a feeling in the Old Land that Canada, grosses the twitching takes the form 
with tt.M sparse population and great areas of vacant lands and enormous of sp'ism.s. In which the Jerking mo- 
umievelopod natural resources, ought to come to the relief of Hrltaln and the nmy 

HItti^h ]ieop> through the acceptance of large numbers of the unemployed. the patient is unable to hold 

ami that in doing so this Dominion would not only render a real service to anything in the hands or walk stead- . , , , ,, 

those woikeis and the Fmptre but would ultimately be well repaid through ily. In severe cases the speech is Khineland by 1-ranee Hclglum ana 
the infusinn of so much British blood into the cosmoiKditan cit.rnship of "^Tected. The disease is due Kngland wa.s demanded in a declara- 


For Evacuation Of Rhineland 

l>ee1ar:itlon Of Foliry At 

SocIuIInI Gathering 
Immediate evaeuntion of the 


while the relaying is now going ot* 
in the Hropk.s subilivision, between 
('algary and Medicine Hal. 

The relaying consisted of the re¬ 
placement of 80 and 85 pound steel 
by rnilB w-clghing 100 pounds per 
foot. The heavier rail is necessary 
in view of the increased speed of the 
trains and their greater weight. 

As mentioned abo^’e, 1.3.5 miles of 


this country, comes through an enriched b (id sim- , ; V Aieavy rail have been laid on the Ma- 

In Canada itself there are men more or less prominent in the life of the piy. pr. Williams’ Ihnk Dills have >or international congress^ pie freek subdivision. On the 

( isnti v who are critical of the immigration now coming into the Dominion been most successlul in reaching this meeting at Brussels. Ke-cstabllsh-, brooks subdivision the mileage of 
and uhn loudly demand that settlors from the British Isles be given a pro- JrouMe German sovereignty in the; heavy steel will be about 130. It is 

estimated that the eost of relaying 
the track is approximately $1,000,000 
per hundred miles, thus the work on 
the ('algary division this year will 
cost the (Canadian Pacific Bailway a 
total of about $2,06.5,000. 


Steps To Be Taken To Put Into 
0|»ernUoii Recent I.<eg1slaUon 
With the return to Ottawa of Hon. 
J. A, Bobb, minister of finance, 
dennitr steps will probably be taken 
to put into operatioon the legislation 
of 1927 authorizing farm credits. 

The first step, it is staled, will 
likely be the appointment of a central 
board to bo known as the Canadian 
Farm Loan Board. Under the statute, 
this board will be composed of four 
members, one of which will be the 
Minister of Finance. 

Six provinces have passed the 
necessary legislation, electing to 
come under the scheme. These are: 
Quebec, Alberta, Manitoba, BrIttsU 
Columbia. New Brunswick and Nova 
Scotia. Ontario, Saskatchewan, and 
Prince Fdw'ard I.sland had not as yet 
taken final steps in this direction. 


IcrciK'c over all (dhers. even to the extent of excluding thojc ot 
British birth. 


nthpi thnn ***' blood. Which it enriches and Saare region was also demanded. 

. purifie. The lollowing instance covering the demands 

... provo.s the va’.ue of Dr. Williams ... .i , 

Opposed to these gioups is a large Iwdv of t'an.adiaii opinion which PmU Pdls in this trouble. Mrs. Thom- applauded by the French dclega- 

h..l,ls Ihul il wou-.l be mi-stakc not only for'l-nnacla but for Britain to IS.!;”'any,: ■ in. tion whirl, Joined tbc Gennnn.H in a 

brin« into this Doniinion lar,e numbers of the British unemployed who laek '.VmrW for^y^^^^^^ de.nonstratl on for Its ad option, 

the litness and (lualifications whiih would eiiuble them to make successful wiOi good results. 1 beJeve they saved n i 'tk 

citizens in this newer land. As the Muitster of l^bor recently painted out. the life of my only son. At tcii yeBis 

it would be no kindness to brinp unen,ployed men fron. Britain unless there of “fie be prew very nervous anu J!™: 


Prior to 182.5 women’s shoes were 
made without heels. 


■ed men from Brita n unless nere r,eV;ioped’i„‘,o‘ s'bM't'us P>e continue to use Dr. ■Thorny- W.ter Power Installation 

3 good service would be rendered HI,, Ipj .3 woulu Oil speaks volumes for its _ 


It i.s rfcognized, too. that in Canada emplovim nt l.s subject to seasonal there tame l() ino a 

. . . , . » , A.' s Idtlc lKM)k telling of Dr. Williams 

ihangc.s. ami that even under the most favorable and prosperous conditions pjjj^ j 

a nie.a.sure of unemployment l.s inevitable during the winter months. Win- jo him. By the time two boxes were 


i.s employment for them here, and that no 

the Kmpire bv lessening the number of unemployed in Britain and creating j^ik and twitch, then his speech wa.s I’<*^IIng elllclency. Ever since it was Million llorsenouer To Re 

au acuio uuom,>ioym..nt situation in Danada. a;Tertod, an., bis eondition was pit,- ‘ir/entreirt" Su AUd^d WHb.n N>x‘ K..V Vears , 

manifold usefulness in relieving and Two million horsepower will it is' 
cuts, burns, scald^. and Arious in- by the depurlment of the 

ter emp’oynicnl is at low ebb in the cities and larger towns during the win- u.-sed there was an improvement in hi.- fla»*>»Htory ijains its rec( 
ter. and unless winter emplovmcnl on the farms can be .secured for them, condition and by the time six boxes lepron^^_ 

Bnlish imn.iK.ants miKht f.a.o badly. throuKb ao fault of their own. or the disappear,.,i, and lie was 

fault of anybody else. Between .Xpril and November, the situation is entire- well and strong. 1 have also given 

ly different with farm work, railway con.stiuction, building operations and the pids to my growing girls, and I 

municipal improvements and works of all kinds under wav. December to know ol no better strengthening 
^ ‘ , nu'dicine. I may add that the same 

March is the cntual period. applies to grown-uns as well.* 


Take Up Homestead Lands 


l>eiiiand 


interior, be added to the water i>ow- 
er installation in the Dominion with¬ 
in the next few years. This new work 
i will require a direct investment of at 
I least $200,000,000. 

In The annual statement of the Hon. 
Charles Stewart, minister of the in- 


llas Been Very BrUk 
Northern Allierta 

Demand for homestead land in the terior. with reearrl tn the nrnereaa 



lei to return to Brlta'U. must be returned. 

For the .sake of tiu’se men first and foremost, and for the sake of Can- 
atla and Britain sei ondly. it is to be hoped that by far the greater number 
will be placed in all-the-yeur round employment. Canada wants these British¬ 
ers. and they should be accorded a hearty welcome and every 
possible chance to make good. In any mass movement of population there 
Is bound to be a number of mislits. chronic grousers and hopeless incom¬ 
petents. but the experiment being made should not be judged by these 
exception^', but by the measure of success attending the movement as a 
whole. 


Travelling Clinic 


<«o\eniim'rit ('linic PayN ViNit 
Peace Kiver DiHtrict 


point 

^ I reported during the month of June, minion during the first six or seven 
making a total of 732 for the three months of 1928. A mid-season re- 
To months period ending June 30th. and view of conditions now indicates that 



RUG YARN 

at Peace Biver 400 entrea in June, during the whole year as much as|$l*ir) per pound up. Twenty-one 

A Government travellinj? clinic bas. "P “ '•P'*'’ f'”' "-P- "'“I ^8'’'Dent^T7'oHma''ont * 

cn operating in the l*eace River **'*'^‘^ months. hew development or in addition to ex- j _’ ^ ’ 

isting stations. 


Yarn 


been operating 
District this season. At five popula¬ 
tion centres a total of 311 chilrden 
were examined in 10 days. A total of 


HE DIDN’T THINK 

DYSENTERY 

COULD BE RELIEVED 


Harvest time in the West is a lime of stress. It is a strenuous period, minor operations were performed, 
when everybody is obliged to work long hours. It is a time wnen the farm- children given dental qxamina- 

er. anxious to secure in safety the results of a year's labor. Is apt to be im- extractions performed, and 

patient and exacting, and to these miners unused to long hours and engaged o^I^**^* dental treatment given to 128 when I came home from overwa* 

doctor said it was chronic and did not 


Mr. John Melling, Fenner, Alta,, 
writes:—“I am a returned soldier. 


in unfamiliar work, the farmer may appear to be a hard taskmaster. Tliere 
must be a recognili»m of these differences and diftlcultics on both sides. The 
harvest hand should strive to realize to the full his own inexperience and 
shortcomings in his new environmnt and exert himself to the utmost to give 
satisfaction and make good. The farmer employer, on the other hand, 


Guhollne Tax Ueveiitie 

In the lirst two months. May and j 

Juno, in which the Ihrec-cent guso- 

should exercise a maximum of patience and endeavor to teach these men and line lax was in force in Saskatch- 

bnng out the best in them in the hope and expectation of encouraging them ewan, $325,000 was collected, it was 

to do their best and inducing in them a real liking for Canada and a deter- ofllcially announced. When the gaso 

miiiation to remain and make a success of life in this country. line tax act was passed at the last 

these British miners. If. as a harvest hand, they have a man seeking to do session of the Legislature, it was cs- 

Farmers, too. should co-operate to the fullest extent possible with the timated that the revenue to the prov- 

Dominion and Brovincial Governments in finding winter employment for f..n 

. . . . . , , . » 1 1 ii- 11 1 * J * * : Ince would be. for the full year. SiOO,- 

his best and make good, arrangements sliould. if possible be made to retain ^ • 

best and make good, an angements should, if possible be made to retain 

him throughout the winter and until work becomes plentiful in the spring --- 

of the new year. Stop the ('otigli. Cougliing is 

Judicially handled, and with everybody striving to do hts best, this caused by irritation in the respira- 
experimeiit with British miners may well prove to be a turning point in the tory passages and is the effort to dis- 
hislory of immigration to Canada. The British Government is now training lodge ob.structlons that come from 
an additional 21 .o ()0 miners and their families for agricultural life in the inflammation of the mucous mem- 
Dominlons. If the coming ten thousand harvesters make a success of their brane. Treatment with Dr. Thomas’ 
undertaking, and if llio Canadian people unitedly help them to do so,—• Eclectric Oil will allay the inlluinma- 
this country will undoubtedly receive the bulk of these other 21.000 partial- tion and in consequence the cough 
ly trained men and women. Canada wants them, and our people should do w'ill usually stop. Try it and you will 
everything in reason to encourage them to come here. he satisfied. 

The present movement pre.senls a golden opportunity, therefore, to ... - 

those who have been out.«poken in their criticism of past immigration efforts 
from Britain, It is now up to them to throw themselves with equal vigor 
into the tusk of finding permammt work for the thousands who are pow or 
ihortly will be in our midst. 


think it could be relieved. However, 
he doctored me for quite a while, but 
did me no good. One day the druggist 
asked me if 1 had ever tried 


Uussia Needs (’apilallHls , 

It was understood that Bussia is at-1 
tempting to float a $15,000,000 loan 
abroad, to be used in support of the 
Bussian railway system. Negotia-: 
tions are said to be under way in 
Berlin. London and New York. ' 



AU mothers can put away anxiety . 
regarding their suffering children' 
when they have Mother Graves’ i 
Worm Exterminator to give relief. 
Its effects are sure and lasting. 


No wonder it makes a man act like , 
a bear to have a catty woman dog ; 
his footsteps. 


A great mind treats little minds 
us such and is never belittled by 
them. 


*'0n bis recommendation I bought 
a bottle and after 1 had taken it got 
some relief, so I got two more, and 
have never had the dysentery since 
1925. 

Put up only by The T. Milburn C®., 
Limited, Toronto, Ont. 


Millard’s 

aid. 


IJiiinient—u reliable' flrst 


When a man is satisfied with his 
lot he invariably plants a keep-off- 
the-grass sign on it. 


Big Earnings 

are made by Agents who 

Sell Kalles 

Hand Tailored 

Men’s Clothing 

A particulary good-selling line 
of quality clothing that ap¬ 
peals to the better class trade. 
AU advanced styles -designed 
by Mr. Sam Kalles, member of 
The International Designers' 
Association. Samples of ma¬ 
terials (Finest Scotch and 
English Woollens) and all sta¬ 
tionery supplied free. An op¬ 
portunity to get into business 
for ytnirself. Improved meas¬ 
urement charts simplify order 
taking. Write for information 
to 

KALLES LIMITED 

268 Yonge St. Toronto, Ont 

'Rfi/trenc*—Royal Hank of Canada 


Canada has the must complete 
governmental system of wireless 
telegraphy of any country. 


Gyros To Meet At Edmonton 


his lieutenant. They succeed A. 
Claire Ainolt, of Calgary, and Lynn 
Nurlhri ii ( it> ( luiscii As Next Fail bail n, of Lethbridge. Lynn Fair- 

in j; Place Ol Bihlrii t H , n v-xis nominated for the gov- 

Kdnionlon wa.'j chosen as the next <'rnorship but refused to stand owing 
meeting jilace of District S Gyros at to business reasons. A resolution re- 
the concluding session of their or- Raiding representation at Gyro in- 
ganization at Nelson. B.c. Robert iPrnalional conventions was voted 
Muir, secretary of the bklmonlon ®tit. 

club, was elected district governor Activities came to an end with an 
and Ira M» Naughtun, of Letlibridge. ' excellent steamship sail on Kootenay 

Lake which was attended by about 
100 Gyros and their ladies. 


Blistered Feet. 

If walking has blistered your 
feet, batlu* them with .Mlu- 
urd'H. Sure relief. 



Plutlimni In Cuiiuda 

j (Janada is the third largest produc¬ 
er of platinum among the countries 
of the world, Russia and Colombia, 
South America, holding first and sec¬ 
ond place respectively. Last year 
Canada produced 11,228 fine ounces of 
platinum valued at $717,613. 


VV N U. 1747 


“What are diplomatic illations, 
father?" 

“There are no such people, my 
boy.” 


WOMAN SO 
SICK GOULD 
NOT WORK 

Helped by Taking Lydia E. Pink* 
ham’s Vegetable Coibpound 


Gruinlund, Sask.—"I am gUui that 
I heard of that good Lydia K. Pink- 

dKiru’s mcHlicinc and 
|l will nut be with¬ 
out it aguin. I was 
so sick that I could 
nut work at all and 
could not sew on 
thtt machine. My 
aunt tola me of 
Lydia E^ Pink- 
ham’s Vegetable 
Compound and now 
I am telling all of 
my friends how 
good it is and I will 
answer all letters I get from women.” 
—Mrs. Mary Scut;LTi£S, Gruinland« 
&ask. 



l.,euii .Men IP3ter IiiKiiraiKM* UinkM 
In conversation an English insur¬ 
ance man said that, unlike Cae.sar, 
insurance companies prefer lean men, 
as they consider them better “lives" 
than fat men. In this connection he 
added that men of moderate girth 
usually put on considerable weight if 
they give up smoking. His observa¬ 
tion of this parhcular method of 
■ weight-building has extended over 
many years. 

(iruiii Stucks larger 
The Dominion Bureau of Statistics 
reixirts the following as the stocks 
of grain In Canada at th(* closevof 
! the crop year ended July 31, 1928, as 
I compared w'ith ..the same date last 
] year W'ltbin brackets. The quantities 
are expressed in imperial bushels. 
Wheat. 76,484,052 (50,765,435); Oats, 
28,712,183 (23,045,449): Barley, (1- 
293,777); Flax seed, 1,290,347 (2,- 

056,106.) 


HER( 


Easy to 

use 


PERMANENT BUILDING PAPER 


EASY TO USE 

Hercules Permanent Building Pa¬ 
per is tough. It will not tear or 
crack with rough handling. Build¬ 
ers save time and avoid incon¬ 
venience with It. 

EASY TO SPECIFY 

Hercules comes in three grades^ 
x« sz, XXX—for various purposes, irni 
Specify “Herculee” and the grade 
required. 


■yt 


r^EASY TO SELL 

> When a home Is Hercules protect- 

\ a<l* Silling is easy. There ia al- 
Jways a ready market for a dry 


Specify 


an 


lys a ready 
d warm home. 


The most obstinate corns fall to re¬ 
sist Holloway’s Corn Remover. Try 
it. 


The wrongs of other people are 
continually getting mixed up with 
our rights. 


Let .Minaid’s Liiiiiiient Kelieve Pain. 


Sell 


t for a dry 
Hercules U 
tested and proven wind proof and 
damp proof. 

l£xamine Hercules. We will glad¬ 
ly furnish samples. May we? 


> btHtTCO 

HAMILTON. CANADA 















No Nation On EartK 
tse Position 


ADVICE TO PARENTS 


VISITING CANADA 


xpiorations 


Waywardness Of Children 
Larfely Due To l^ack Of 

Parental Discipline 
(k'neral l>raper. Toronto's Poller 
Clilef, Is not eoneentrating nil his ef¬ 
forts merely In Improvfni^ the efll- 
elency of the force ttnelf. He real- 
I taes that the succtm of any poltoo 
BoHih Amertcfin Plant Mny Be Val- i system U dependent on the co-oper- 

I atlon of the people at larj^e and that 
times I Infinitely the best public protection 


omifiion 


ains 


ana 


Maps Must Be Accurate 


Map Makina Is An Art Thst Be- 
qnlre Great PxactHude 

The liihoaraphina of maps is a 
craft rcquliinff great exactitude, and 
liihographerH have many troubles. 
Not the least of these is with paper 
that shrinks or expands though over 
so slightly under varying weRhter 
condition.**- 

In Hritaln's African colony of Gold 
Coast all color printing for maps has 
to erase during January when the 
harmattan blows. The dry wind fol¬ 
lowing rapidly on humid conditions 
causcM a i^ange in the paper of as 
much a quarter of an inch In a 
{‘hcet two feet square. This makes 


A substance twu 

sweeter than sugar cane has been j Is a high standard of public morals. 

In writing in Carry On. a local vet¬ 
erans' organ, he gives some note¬ 
worthy advice to parents. 

The Chief is old-fnshloned enough 
to believe that the Fifth f:ommand- 
ment means Just what it says to 
children; and that no better formula 
for child-training can ever be discov¬ 
ered than is imparted in Proverbs 
29:17. and 32:6. 

*Tn what particular has the home 
failed?" the Chief asks, "t would 


eratioon. but for generation after | 
generation. The British Bmplrs' 
stands above everything else in the! 
world for freedom, openness, and! 
freedom that Is not merely political 
freedom.” 

With these words. Rt. Hon. Ramsay 
MarDonaM. leader of the British La- 
bor thirty, and former Prime Minis-1 
ter of Great Britain, synuned up a | 
daclaratloon of faith In the perma¬ 
nence of the ties of Empire, VThen ad- ] 
drcBsitig the Canadian Club at Mon¬ 
treal. Mr. MacDonald expressed con¬ 
fidence In t?anada's future and assert¬ 
ed that Ihe spirit of buoyancy he had 
found In the Dominion was duplicated 
in Great Britain. 

Mr. MacDonald agreed that trade 
preferences played a large part in 
holding the Empire together, but 
said: “Trade is sometimes a fickle 
Jade. It ia too often In the market 
place to i>o reliable. We -must find 
something more." 

Here Mr. MacDonald made his dc- 
claratioon of his Idea of the essential 
bond of empire unity. 

He continued with a discussion of 
freedom. A nation following the 

gleam of freedom, he said, a common- Want Self-Oo%*emment For India 
tty. A commonwealth of nations xhe Associated Chambers of Com- 
woukl receive the homage of all the merce at Bombay, which claim to 
other nations of the world. That, he^ represent 1,000,000.000 pounds of Bri- 
said. was his ideal of the British Em- [ capital invested in India, have 
plre. I made a move in favor of sclf-govern- 

Mi MacDonald’s vision of Canada’s; nient for India. They addressed a 
future was given in the following ] memorandum to the Simon comrals- 
w’ordn; ' 1 gion. which is making a political sur- 

‘•Canadu. and this is the last word of India, recommending that 

I shall offer you. has a future that iaj aelf-govcrnment should be given more 
secure. As the years go on your i>opu-] ^ fair trial. 

lation win get bigger and bigger. -- 

your factories will become larger and 

rr;' Winnipeg Newspaper Union 


sunflower and daisy are familiar 
representatives. The sweetness It 
contains is not a sugar, but a glu- 
cosld somewhat similar to that found 
in Ihe root of llcorlcc. The leaves are 
dried and ground up, and a pinch of 
them is added to anything that re- j say In relaxation of parental disci- | 
quires sweetening; or they may be pHne and in the neglect of general 
soaked In' water and a sweet liquor I supervision over the rising genera- 
prepared. One of the moat valuable' tlon. The so-called emancipation of 
qualities of this liquid is that it does ] women from the bondage of the 
not ferment. The possible uses of; home' has been followed by a corres- 
such a plant are more or less obvious, i ponding emancipation of the children 
It will particularly interest sufferers , from the control and discipline of the 
from diabetes, promising to furnish parents, and is one of the most po- 
them with a sweetening that has none tent factors In the growth of those 
of the harmful properties of sugar, conditions from which youthful de- 
Kxtensivo tests will be required, of llnquency and crime develop. This 
course' before it con be said that the! body of conditions, this criminal 
new* substance is wholesome and free j matrix (if I may use such a term). Is 
from all deleterious effects. The fostered, if not actually created by 
plant has perennial roots, so that cut-1 the indifference, the lassitude, the 
ting the stem does not terminate its; neglect or whatever you might call 
' lifft I it— the failure by pai:onts fully to 

perform their duties. The conse¬ 
quence is that the young of today 
arc allowed to be poisoned in heart 
and mind by filthy, suggestive, vic- 

80 easily obtainable 


in addition to carrying on their reg¬ 
ular work, surveyors and explorers of 
the Toi>ogiaphlral Survey of the De¬ 
partment of the InlPflor have been 
, gradually penetrating Into the Great 
Northern Plains. With the advant- 
I age of modern instruments and the 
J benefit of scientific and te-hnical 
training, those officers of the de- 
' portnient are enabled to make mora 
I accurate surveys of the rountty than 
j was possible by early explorers. 

' How one of the first exprorers o! 

I Canada’s Middle We.st came to apply 
I the name "Barren Ground.s" to what 
I has proved to be one of tlie most 
I fertile areas in the world is given In 
, the account of Henry Kelsey's r.v- 
' plorations in the last quarter of the 
^ ( seventeenth century. One of Kelsey’s 
^'longest expeditious was made bo- 
1 tween 1690 and 1692 when he trav¬ 
elled from Port Nelson, on Hudson’s 
Bay. by way of the Hayes and Saji- 
katchewan Kivers. He Journeyed in 
; the company of a wandering bund 
^ of Assinil>oine.s, into the heart of the 
; western ]uairles. His diary affords 
-1 interesting reading today, paitlcu- 
• larly the entry for Augxisl 2*’.. 1691. 

- whieh leads as follows: 

■This instant ye Indians going on 
. hunting kill’d groat stove of Buffillo. 
kiNow ye maimer of their hunting of 
f these Beast on ye barren ground is 
s when they see a great parcel of 
e them together they surround them 
■ with men; which done, they gatne. 
n themselves into a smaller Compass 
1; keeping ye Beast still in ye middle 

- and so shooting yni till they break 
o out at some place or other and so 


Here you have John W. Turpie. fif¬ 
teen year old London schoolboy and 
member of the Westminster Troop 
of Boy Scouts, who worked his way 
to ('anada and across to N^w West¬ 
minster. B.C., as a representative of 
his Troop, with which the New West¬ 
minster Scouts is afiiiliated. Turpie 
took a Job on a Canadian Pacific lin¬ 
er for his Atlantic passage. 


Alberta Macaroni 


ious literature 
and widely discussed on all hands; byj 
moving pictures, many of which teach i 
everything but virtue, and demon¬ 
strate in detail how the worst crimes 
can be committed; and by frequent¬ 
ing with idle, loose company in dan¬ 
gerous pleasure resorts. Undoubtedly 
society is much to blame for not sup¬ 
pressing such literature and pictures 
and resorts; but, nevertheless, the 
parents, being bound by their duty 
are primarily to blame for the condi¬ 
tion of the young ones." « 

C^Jhief Draper agrees with a noted 
Western Canadian, Rev. Brother Jo¬ 
seph. that there ia too prevalent a 
tendency to leave growing children 
I too much to their own devices He 
urges atliletic sports on the ground 
I that "a sound body makes a sound 
mind." Of far more importance than 
athletics, or organized trafnlgg, he 
Judges the example of elders: "Youths 
cannot be expected to have any re¬ 
spect for law and order when their 
ciders disregard the law*. Greater care 
must be exercised In the education of 
boys in church, schoool and at home; 
attention must be paid to them in 
their spare time; and last, but not 
least, examples must be set by their 
elder.s which it would reflect to a 

Toronto 


Why Russia Imported Wheat 


Late Hardest and Depleted Keserxes 
Ih (tiven Aft UeuKun 

The fact that Soviet Russia recent¬ 
ly has been importing wheat was ad¬ 
mitted at Moscow by A. Mikoyan, 
trade commissar, in an interview 
with the new’spaper Pravada. 

Mikoyan said because of the late 
harvest and depleted reserves, the 
government has )}cen unable to sup¬ 
ply seedn to the districts where the 
wheat crop was a partial failure. 
Hie government, therefore, purchas¬ 
ed 270,000 tons abroad, of which 80 
per cent, already had arrived and the 
balance was expected before the end 
of this month. Despite the necessity 
for importing wheat. Mikoyan said he 
c.xpcctcd the crop to exceed last 
year’s. 


Of the country Itself. Kelsey 
slates: “This plain affords nothing 
but short round sticky grass and 
Buffalo and a great ^ort of Bear 
wch is bigger than any white Bear, 
nnd is neither white nor black but 
silver haired like our English labbit. 
Ye buffillo likewise is not like those 
to ye Northward, their horns grow¬ 
ing like an English ox but black and 
short." 

Kelsci' s interest In the legion was 
from the point of view of Ujc fur 
trader and its jmssibilitles from an 
agricultural standpoint apparently 
never occurred to him. The coun¬ 
try where he hunted the buffalo and 
the grizzlies now contributes lum- 
dreds of mllhons of bushels of grain 
annually and the ‘short round 
sticky grass ’ supports great herds of 
cattle 

A thouband miles north of the 
territory traversed by Kelsey, be¬ 
yond the forested lands of the Cana¬ 
dian West and extending to the .\rc- 
tlc ocean and Hudson’s Bay, arc the 
Great Northern Plains to which 
Kelsey’s epithet has been inislakeii- 
ly transferred. Today's pieture, given 
: by recent explorers, is one of gently 
undulating country tAlth lichens and 
mosses on the hills and shnibs, flow¬ 
ers and grasses flourishing in the 
^ valleys. It is true no trees grow 
north of the timber lino and that 
there are certain arca.s la(klnK in 
vegetation, but the greater part of 
I the region is so far from being bar- 
ren that it actually supports at the 
' present time in addition to the fur- 

hundreds of 


>*our tmagmation wnen you iry lu, 
picture it? My friends, there is no 
nation on the face of the earth whose 

I 

future is more secure than yours. ^ 
Wealth will pour into your laps, | 
money will come to you in abun -1 
dance. Economic power will be yours. 
When some of the still new countries 
that are your neighbors will have 
passed beyond the middle age nnd 
begin to show flagging zeal of years, 
Canada will ntill be young. Canada 
W'ill still be buoyant. 

So my friends, with this feeling in 
my heart. 1 . who have led a party and 
headed a government composed 
mainly of men who l>efore they came 
to rule had never entered public 
buildings except as supplicants. I 
who with colleagues who know what 
the British Empire meajis. not as red 
patches on the map. but as hours and 
hrtiirfl iliiv.q and davs. weeks and 


Reclamation Service 


lletu.N ttiiiiibo Land In .\ll>erta and 
SiLskaU’lieuiin To Be f'ul!i\nted 

As a result of experiments of be- [ 
tween five and six years* duration con¬ 
ducted by the (?algary Branch of the 
Water Power and Reclamation Ser¬ 
vice of the Department of the Inter¬ 
ior,- between 6.0(X) and 6,000 acres of 
heavy gumbo land knowm as the Ma¬ 
ple Greek fiats in Alberta and Sas¬ 
katchewan, will soon come under pro¬ 
duction for the growth of alfalfa. By- 
irrigating a couple of town lots and 
experimenting with forage crops. It 
was proved that alfalfa and sweet 
clover can be grown on these flats 
with great success. It is possible some 
Irrigation project to serve the whole 
lands will be developed. 


BurberN Have Trouble \\ itli Watches 
Why is a watch worn by a hair¬ 
dresser subject to frequent break- 
(lowns? "It is the little shor'. bits of 
hair that do the damage " said my 
imlrdi-esscr to me the other day. 
writes a Dally Ghronlcle contributor. 
• The last time I sent mine to be re¬ 
paired after only six months’ wear 
scores of tiny hits of hair were 
found to have clogged the mechan¬ 
ism,** 


boy’s credit to follow 
Globe. 


Even left-handed people sometimes 
find it necessary to waive their 
rights. 


What is Ui greatest water jxjw 
er known to man?" 

"Woman’s tears." 


A combination watch and automa 
tic lighter has appeared in London. 


Canada extends over an area equal 
from Athens to the north pole. 


How do modern girls spend iiiun 
ey?" asks a contemporary. Easily. 


Rust Resistant Wheat 


HAS REMARKABLE COLLECTION 


. / «i«o«iiro In meeting onc-piece frock suitable for 

my heart except pie 5! afternoon or evening W'ear. In 

you and honor for the nation, its past,. contrasting material is 

hope for its future. Nothing but those fectively used for the front and back 
thinirH aro in mv heart and that is Jabots. Insets on the long sleeves, and 
w f r u trvin^ fto imoer- shirred tunic at each side which 

what I have been > g. P , achieves the modi.sh uneven hemline 

fectly I am afraid, to express to you, extending l)elow the edge of the 
while thanking you for the honor you; in front. In View "B" the frock 

havii done me " ‘is fashioned of one material and the 

have ciont nie^__ ^ aleevos arc omitted. The neck and 

j armhole.s are bound and a wide crush- 
.,1 ~ fastens at the side. No. 1631 

is for misses and small women, and 
is in sizes 16, 18, and 20 years. Size 


Eiu'ouruging lleftulta .\re Obtained 
III MaUlng ExperiiueiitH TIiIh 
V ear 

•‘We are holding our breath, ” re- 
N. Newman, Dominion 


marked L 
cerealist. who is In the West, the ex¬ 
pectation referring to the develop¬ 
ment of a grade of >vlu*at that will 
be rust resistant. Mr. Newman is 
looking into the situation of "Re¬ 
ward" wheat, which is not rust proof 
but grows so quickly as to be ma¬ 
tured before the rust season develops 
with the humid weather. This year 
"Reward" has been sown on 400 
acres of experimental farms, while 
467 farmers are growing it from lim¬ 
ited samples distributed among 
them. The result so far is stated to 
be most encouraging. 


bcai-ers and musk-oxen 
thousands of caribou. 


The German manufacturers are 
now invading the typewriter market 
in Canada. They are offering their 
beat portable at $42.70 net. which 
would be equivalent to $53,38 duty 
paid agaliial the U.S. price of $60.75 
delivered in Canada. Financial Post. 


The public at largo is but an ele 
vutor used to hoist the chosen fov 
to prominence. 


are very bright, It is Im 
keep them in the dark. 


If people 
possible to 


Ruitie FheoMiits In .41berta 
The Medicine Hat Fish and Game 
Association have been experimenting 
with the raising of pheasants by sup¬ 
plying different people with the eggs. 
The Association now possess 22 young 
birds and. in addition, will shortly 
have 20 grown pheasaiitH shipped to 
them from Oregon. 


How To Order Patterns 


Address: Winnipeg Newspaper Union. 
175 McDermot Ave., Winnipeg 


Pattern No 


Tiafllc Cop: "Hey. who do you 
think you are?" 

Driver: ‘Oh, I’m just one of the 

you your salary 


with Heven dials, giving the time in as 
many cities; one with diimes com¬ 
posed of ungeU striking three bells; 
a singlehanded watch in which the 
hour changes in a little opening at 
the tup, au<l others of unusual work¬ 
manship, design and value. 


John Sutciiff Smitii. of St Cathar¬ 
ines. Onl., and a few of his 230 col¬ 
lection of ancient and modern watches 
of remarkable design. This collec¬ 
tion, valued at $25,000, is to be pre¬ 
sented to the Royal Ontario Museum. 
Shown with Mr Hmitii is a watch 


• We must have a sale tomorrow. 
Put up all the prices ‘25 per cent to¬ 
day so that we can make a genuine 
25 per cent, reduction tomorrow ‘ 
Sondagftniftfte-Strlx. Stockholm. 


! taxpayern that pays 
I for insulting me!” 


"Don't trust him. He is a man 
who will stroke your back before 
your face and laugh in your face be¬ 
hind your back."- Pole Mele. Paris. 


Name 


Your efforts to please otluus 
variably affoid you plca.sure. 


Town 








RECORDER, RAYMOND, 'ALTA 


RULING INDIAN PRINCES 


Canndlnn NnttonnI Rn!l\va\V Tour 
To Omit nrltoln and 
Drnmiirk, 1028 


CJohli'n Text: "UpJoU’o In Ihr l^nr<! 
always: again I will nay, Kojoiro." 
PhtIlipplanM 4.4. 

I/<»ason; Arts lrt.Hl-40. 

Dovotlonal Hcatllng: Isaiah •‘i.O l.l. 


InrroaHing alarm is being expressed 
over the unemployment situation in 
(.real nrilaln, with 1.300,000 men 
out of work. 

Two new brands of whisky, approv¬ 
ed by the Ontario Liquor Control 
Hoard, have been put on the market 
by the commission. The varieties are 
styled ' Commission No. 1.” and Com¬ 
mission No. 2. ' and l>ear the seal of 
the board’s approval on the bottles. 

l>r. I’aul, chief chemical analyst 
for the Surete Oenerale. the French 
Scotland Yard, is reported to have 
detected toxic matter in the viscera of 
Captain Alfred Loewensteln. Belgian 
llnancler, whose death recently was 
surrounded with mystery. 

Four men ligld up the First Na¬ 
tional Bank of Buxton. N.D., and es¬ 
caped with t>etween $3,500 and $4,- 
r>00. They made their getaway In a 
dark blue Buick sedan heading east 
out of Buxton, which is about 65 
uiiles north of Fargo. 

Baron Von Huenefeld. owner of the 
trans-Atlantic monoplane, the Brem¬ 
en. which Captain Hermann Koehl 
and Col. James Fltzmaurice piloted 
across the Atlantic, will make a pres¬ 
ent of the disabled plane to the pro¬ 
jected municipal museum of New 
York. 

Investigation of the immediate 
|H)wer requirements of the city of Sas¬ 
katoon is to be made by a commit¬ 
tee of the Saskatchewan Ciovernnient. 
with a view to working out a plan 
under which a start can be made in 
the production luid sale of power un¬ 
der central control. 

Owing to inadequate steamship ac¬ 
commodation. it will be imiKissible to 
trnns|X)rt to Canada full quota of 10.- 
000 unemployed which were to work 
In the Western harvest tlelds. accord¬ 
ing to J. Bnice Walker, director of 
Kuropoan immignition for Canada, 
He states that possibly not more than 
fr.500 would be taken to Canada from 
fill sources. 


(Continued.) 

We were now In Hie home of the 
Clydesdales, and a call by Mr, WcIr. 
fmm Newcastle, in the morning had 
brought a pressing invitation from 
Messrs. A. & N. Templeton, of San- 1 
dy Knowe. near Kelso, to visit them, 
lids took a section of our party to 
sec the great horse ’‘Bcnofaclor" and 
some of his progeny as well as the 
Border Leicester flock of Messrs. I 
Templeton and here we had our first 
taste of Scottish hospita Ity. The 
brothers with their sisters anvl moth¬ 
er entertained us royally to a de¬ 
lightful lea and the 'woe drappie” 
was not missing. Ours was a great 
privilege because the afternoon was 
lovely and from the higti ground at 
Sandy Knowe the eye can roam for 
twenty to thirty miles in every di¬ 
rection over the beautiful Scottish 
countryside. Our visit over, we con¬ 
tinued our journey to Kdinburgh en¬ 
livening the night with old familiar 
songs. 

The "main l)ody" had gone on. 
passing through Dalkeith at dusk, 
awakening many memories for one 
of the members of our party. Mr. 
James Walker, representing the 
Canadian Bank of Commerce. Toron¬ 
to. who was born in this pleasant 
Scottish town. Fvening found us in 
Edinburgh, comfortably established 
in the North British Hotel, overlook¬ 
ing the famous Princes Street. 

From Melrose we had sent a chal¬ 
lenge to meet the best curling rink 
In Scotland, the aspiring rink being 
our friends from Deloraine. Mani¬ 
toba. but unfortunately a game could 
not be secured owing to its being 
Saturday. 

Our first engagement was to visit 
the Clydesdale Stud at Porlobello. of 
Mr. Robert Park, owner among oth¬ 
er notable stock of "Brunstane 
Again" and "Brunstane Phyllis.” 
both of which, along with a number 
of fine colts, were shown for our 
benefit. To our astonishment all 
thr.se animals, including the great 
stallion, were put through their paces 
by Mr.Parks’ twin daughters, girls of 
seventeen, whose competent horse¬ 
manship delighted us all, as did their 
modesty. Mr. Park is no believer In 
fancy" Clydesdales, but prefers to 
breed for scale and power, and w'e 
listened with respect to his views as 
he expounded his breeding princi¬ 
ples. 

Mr. Park took us into his home. 

' Brunstane House." Here Mrs. Park 
and her daughters entertained us to 
high tea in the room where the final 
committee meeting was said to have 
b^en held when the Union of Scot¬ 
land and England w'as decided in 
1707. The room is eight-sided and 
contains a 14th century fireplace. 
But all eyes were turned to the great 
sideboard on whlcti were two Caw*- > 
dor Cups, both won in the same year 
by sire and daughter "Brunr.aoje 
Again” and "Brunstane Phyl!‘a.’ 

A trip to the famous Forth Bndge, 
reminding us so much of our own 
Quebec Bridge, completed our first 
day in Kdinburgh. 

Leaving for Stirling at 8 a.m. en 
route for Perth, w'e were treated to 
a taste of Highland weather, for snow 
began to fall by the time we reached 
Stirling Castle. This forbidding 
stronghold, perched high on a domin¬ 
ating rock overlooking the plain be¬ 
neath. is interesting at any time, bui 
seen through a Scottish mist and fai¬ 
ling snow, it was doubly fascinating, 
notwithstanding that we were robbed 
of the view of the field of Bannock¬ 
burn. Taken and retaken, this grey 
building, calm enough today, has 
withstood many sieges. Within its 
walls were born James II. IV. and V., 
of Scotland, and here were crow’neu 
James V., Mary and James VI.. of 
Scotland, afterw’ards First of Eng¬ 
land. 

We walked the courts and trod the 
battlements. We examined with some 
wonder the window of the Douglas 
Room where the rebellious Earl w'os 
stabbed to death by James II.. In 
1452. We left with the influence of 
those fiercely stirring times still up¬ 
on us, to view in front of the castle 
, the noble statue of Robert the Bruce, 
where, his voice thrilling with pride, 
a small boy w'ith hU sister told us of 
Scotland’s glorious days, excelling In 
this the guide to the Oastle itself. 

Next w’e came to the wonderful 
, Wallace Monument, a great granite 
tower, four square. 220 feet in height 
and standing 520 feet above the level 
of the F'orth. In a niche on the west 
corner stands a bronze statue of 
Wallace, measuring 15 feet from 
heel to helmet, to the tip of the 
sword 21 feet, and raised 50 feet 
above the doorway -a noble figure. 


Kx|»liiiiation(« and 4'otiiineiit<« 

The Second (Mnistian (Tonveit In 
I*hllippl, verses 1G-1H. Pnul was 
greatly disturbed at Philippi by a for¬ 
tune-telling maid who kept foll<»wing 
him and Silas and crying. "These men 
are servants of the Most Hlgti tiod. 
who proclaim unto you the way of 
salvation." Professor Hainsay thinks 
that the slave girl’s mln<l had become 
distorted and diseased by her belief 
In her supernatural possession, but 
was all the more acute in certain per¬ 
ceptions and intuitions, and that she 
had become alive to the normal infiu- 
enco w'htcli the intense faith of the 
strangers gave tbeni. 

The girl followed I*aul and Silas 
for many days, and her reilonited 
chant drew a crowd of cuiiostty seek¬ 
ers. Paul wa.s "sore troubled." and 
at length he turned to her. and in the 
name of Jesus Hhrlst bade the spirit 
leave her. and she became wholly 
normal. Nothing furiher Is told alxuit 
this girl whose story arouses our 
sympathy. One writer e.xprosse.s his 
belief that "She would partake of the 
generous help of Lydia and of I he oth¬ 
er Christian women at Philippi, who 
would see In her no longer a bond- 
servant of the men who had domin¬ 
ion over her. but a sister beiovei! in 
the lx)rd." 


Maharajah of Kashmir, who won 
considerable notoriety ns Mr. A. In 
the Robinson blackmail case; (2) the 
Maharajah of Patiala; (3) H. H. Sir 
Jngat Singh, and (4) the Maliarajah 
of Hnjpip:a. They are conferring 
with a committee of Englishmen, 
headed by Sir Ilarcourt Butler. 


states. It is said that the rulers of 
the native free states seek to create 
a federation which would recognize 
some central autliority as a first step 
to a larger union, which. It is hoped, 
would embrace British India as one 
of its unitH. The four spokesmen for 
the reigning princes arc: (1) the 


Conferences are now in progress 
between representatives of the ruling 
Indian princes and of the socrctarv 
of state for India. At present only 
about half of India is under direct 
British ru e. while the rest is made 
up of a hundred so-called independent 


Wat Eminent Western Couniel 


NEW YORK BANKER 

HEADS EXPEDITION 


our places next day In the auction 
room. 

Accommodation In Perth was so 
taxed by the sale that nearly ball 
our party had to spend the night In 
Dundee, an opportunity of seeing the 
Jute City which was appreciated. 

Rack In Perth we had the pleasure 
of hearing Mr. I.ovat Fraser, the 
greatest livestock auctioneer in Great 
Britain: Mr. Fraser frequently sells 
pedigree slock at 50 animals per 
hour for several hours at^a stretch. 
He did not belle his fame, for animal 
after animal was sokl during the half 
day that w'as available to us. The les¬ 
son of the sale, so far as we Cana¬ 
dian farmers were concerned, was 
the excellent quality of stock that 
was sold at di.stinctly reasonable 
prices. 

The sensation of the sale <Cas the 
fetching of 3,500 guinea.s by Cap¬ 
tain John MacGllHvrny’a Supreme 
Champion. "Calrossie I>ouble Event 
which was bought by Mr. James 
Fidey, the well-known exporter to the 
Argentine. 

(To Be Continued.) 


C. Mcf'aul. K.C., Prominent l^au- 
yer, Dies At Ills Home In 
Edmonton 

Long prominent ns one of Western 
Canada's most brilliant lawyers and 
a pioneer of forty-five years’ stand¬ 
ing. C. C. MrCaul, K.C., aged 70, diwl 
at his home in Edmonton, recently, 
after a lingering illness. 

Legal and business circles were 
shocked upon learning of the death 
of the eminent counsel, one who had 
taken a leading part In some of the 
most im|>ortanl cases heard In the 
Dbminion. Knowm and held in high 
regard in the prairie provinces, in 
British Columbia and in the far away 
Yukon, where he was one of the 
hardy pioneers w'ho went through the 
gold rush, C. C. McCaul had a wide 
circle of friends and acquaintances. 

From 1883 to 1888. Mr. McCaul 
practiced law et Fort Macleod and 
then he removed to Lethbridge, 
where he established a law partner- 
stiip with F. W. H. Haultain, who 
had opened a law' office in Macleod in 
1884. and later became chief Justice 
of the Northwest Territories. 


Recipes For This Week 

(By fietty Barclay) 


HOW TO MAKE COIT-VtiE 
tilKKSE 


Use freshly coagulated or clabber¬ 
ed milk. Skim off cream. Set pan of 
clabbered milk in hot water and heat 
slowly until curd separates from 
whey. Be careful not to let milk l>e- 
come loo hot or curd will be tough. 
Place In a strainer a piece of chee.se- 
cloth rinsed In hot water. Strain heat¬ 
ed curd mixture until well drained. 

Crush curd in a bowl with a fork. 
Mixing with a wooden {Kituto mu.sher 
will break up lumps and give cheese 
a finer texture. Season to tasle with 
sweet or sour cream, butter, salt ami 
l)epper. Finely chopped onion, pars¬ 
ley, water cress, celery, pimento or 
green pepper may be added. 


Dissect Brain Of Lenin 


Lost Prospector Found 


RASPKtlRKY jrNHKT Uli ll 
FRESH IIKHRIKS 


1 package raspberry Junket |>ow- 
der. 

1 pint milk. 

Fiaspberries. 

Powdered sugar. 

Make junket according to the direc¬ 
tions given on the package. When 
ready to serve, dust berries with ik#a'* 
dered sugar and fill up the glasses. 
Whipped cream may top the berries. 

Fruit and berries like oranges, 
pineapple and strawberries should not 
be put Into the milk when making 
Junket, as Uie fruit cuuseii it to whey. 
These fruits should be crushed, 
sweetened and placed on top as the 
dessert Is served. Blackberries or 
raspberries may be put into the des- 
flcrt, also canned or preserved nerile?*, 
peaches or other fruits. 


In his letter to Mr. Hungerford, 
Mr. Gray said: 

"We found a new country that Is. 
new to the sportsman, and 1 believe 
new also to the trapper and Indian. 
So far I can find no maps that even 
attempt to show the streams of the 
area as anything more than dotted 
lines, and most of these are Incor¬ 
rect. 

"We reached your railroad In 4'- 
days from the centre of this new 
area, although it look us 17 days to 
get in. This will appeal to a lot of 
men who now believe they must spend 
20 days on the trail getting to and 
from their hunting camp and conse¬ 
quently prefer Alaska or the Cassiar. 

"My idea is to cut a trail into this 
country next August; take with me 
a surveyor and assistants; map the 
outstanding features of the country 
and take moving pictures of the 
gtyne, which is more plentiful than 
any place which I have previously 
visited in the Canadian Rockies." 


Well Known Author Of Topiilar 
Stories Basses A)vay At His 
Home In lietit 

Louis Tracy, author of many nov¬ 
els and detective stories, died recent¬ 
ly at his home near Ashford, Kent. 
He was born in 1863, and educated 
privately In Y'orkshlre and France. 
In early life- he varied his journalistic 
career with travels. 

He was attached to the headquar¬ 
ters staff of the British war mission 
in the United States In 1917. In 1921 
he collected a large sum for the 
restoration of Westminster Abbey. 


Goes To Experimental Farm 


J (i. l>u\ldHoii. Of Saska(«-lii*uiin 
Dili versify RecWves Appoiiil- 
iiieiit 

Announcement Is made of the ap* 
puintinent of J. G. Duvidson, B.S.A. 
(Saskatchewan University), MS.A. 
(McGill University), to the position 
of assistant superintendent of the l>o- 
ininion Experimental Farm at Indian 
Head, filling the vacancy created 
with the advancement of (J. D. Mat¬ 
thews to the superintcntleiicy at the 
Scott farm. 

Mr. Davidson comes from Keiving- 
ton, Sask.. where he farms when not 
engaged in his university studies. He 
is u married man and will move his 
family there shortly. 


A bank failure may not upset the 
depositor, but It w'ill cause him to 
lose his balance. 


A elite Oaytinie Frock 

Exceedingly smart is Ibis attrac¬ 
tive frock having the modish bolero 
effect, a V-neck finished with a lie 
collar, and long dart-fitted or loose 
sleeves. The skirt has an invertea 
plait In front and the back is in one 
piece. No. 1636 is in sizes 31. 36. 38. 
40 and 42 inches bust. Size 36 re¬ 
quires 3U yards 39-inch, or 2*4 yar^Js 
54-lnch maleriul. and yard addi¬ 
tional 39-inch contrasting material 
for each View'. Price 25 cents Uie 
pattern. 

The designs illustrated in our new 
Fashion Book are advance style.s for 
Uie home dressmaker, and the woman 
or girl who desires to wear garmenl.s 
dependable for tuste. simplicity and 
economy will find her de.sires fulfilled 
in our patterns. Price of the book 10 
cents the copy. 


After It is too late a man thinks 
of a lot of bright things he might 
have said. 


A flood of tears indicates troubled 
waters. 


KESCT’KS TK.ANS-ATLANTIC FLYWtS 


How To Order Patterns 


Address: Winnipeg Newspaper Union 
175 McDcrmot Ave.. Winnipeg 


Pattern No 


Name 


Buffeted about by waves in their fragile seaplane in mid-Atlantic, Capt. 
Frank T. Courtney, E. B. Hosmer, of Montreal, son of a former Dominion- 
wide financier, bis financial backer, Fred Price, mechanic, and E. W. Gilmour. 
of Glasgow, wireless operator were succored by the Atlantic Transport liner 
MInnew’aska a few days ago. Capt. Courtney and the other three were at¬ 
tempting a flight from the Azores to Newfoundland, when their machine 
fell in flames into the sea. By the aid of their small radio set the Minnewaska 
found them after stic left her course to go to their aid. The Minnewaska 
reached New York on August 6 with the rescued fliers. Photograph shows 
Hbc Minnewaska and inset left, Capt. Courtney; inset right, E. B. Hosmer.-— 
Photos by White Star Line. 


Town 


"Man wanted for gardening, also 
to take charge of a cow who ran 
sing in the choir and blow the or¬ 
gan." 


"If I were ri( h 1 would iu v« 
a brush to canvas again.” 

"X wish 1 had money ami 
should then have us mm h n 
wanted." Sondagsnissc-Slrix, I 
holm. 


Your nose Is red. Are you cold 
No; thirsty." Pele Mele, Paris. 


The total number of radio funs 
throughout the w'orld is stated to 1>« 
ninety millloni. 









TOE RECOEDER. RAYMOND. 'ALT4;. 


London Is Vulnerable To f»f opener poBcj 
A ir Attacks As Proven 
By Mock Bombing Raids 


IlnifN Nntivr Snn^ Of ('Hn»d:i 


l.ondon. Tho annual miinoouvrcs 
of Ihe Hoyal Air Force ended Sat¬ 
urday morning. In Uiohg manoeU' 
vroR "onemy” boinbors made 57 day- 
ligid raids on I^ndon, in nine of 
which they coinplrtcly evaded the de¬ 
fence nnd dropped theoretical mes- 
Ben*^er« of supposed death and dc- 
sliuotlon. 

Ih Igadler-deneval Groves, former 
director of flying operation.*! and now 
Bccrclary of the Air League, said: 

"liondon Is too big to be adequate¬ 
ly defended from an air attack. In 
H short lime Us vital points would 
Iw In ruln.s and all other sections of 
the city would l^e rendered uninhabit¬ 
able Iwcausp of gas.” 

One of the facts of t,he manoeuvres 
is that theoretically 301) tons of 
bomb, loHclocI With Kiu, and high ex-1 
plosives were .Iroppe.l on I.ondon' ‘ ""■'“'■y- 

within one week. 

(teiieral Groves is certain that In 
the event of war. civilian iwptilation 
would suffer most. 

“High explosives nnd gas bond)H 
will he used‘freely In the next con¬ 
flict.” he said. "It will be the atm of 
each side to terrc»rlzc the civilian 
IK)pulation of the other. Ix)ndon is 
pec uliarly vulnerable to an air at¬ 
tack." 

It was brought out that a fleet of j 
enemy bombers c*ou!d he over London 
15 or 20 minutes after crossing the 
coast line. They could reach their 
objective so quickly that unless thoyj 
were inton-epted at tlie coast they ^ 
ro.il.l di ..p tlivlr .•nttro earno ,:f ex-! 'he result of floods, have 

plosives on the elty before dcfcndinR , ‘Greeted an appeal to the govei n.iicnt 
aeroplane squadrons could leave their j 
aerodromes and gain attacking alli-j 
tildes. It was calculated that the 
battle area of such an engagement 
would he 200 miles square and four, 

miles deep. 1 

A further point was that if the 
attacking ’planes were c’uughl and 
destroyed while they were over 
I/>ndon ihe enemy cargoes sini would 
fall on the city and leriible damage 
would result. 

Some of the l.rf)ndon ncwsiiapcrs 
ounlo French newspapers as being 
sui prised at ■ ufllcial hrilish candor 
in making this confession of de¬ 
feat." 

Those papers point out that France 
leads the world in air strength, and 
that, including reserves, she has more 
military ’planes than all other pow¬ 
ers put together. They say. too. that 
Germany dominates commercial avia¬ 
tion. which would be the source of 
many Ijombing aeroplanes in case of 
war. 


I 

Fatal Crossing Accident 

Three Klllecl and One Uiidly Injured 
.\t itrade C'rosnliig In Alherta 
(’algaiy. Three were killed, one 
fatally hurt, subsequently succumb- 
lug In hospital and one other danger¬ 
ously Injured in a crossing accident 
at the lowix of Okotoks. 

The dead are A. .1. CMarke. deputy 
sheriff of the town of Sunburst, Mon¬ 
tana. his wife Jennie, nnd his two 
boys, <tarry aged ten. and Lloyd aged 
four. 

A daughter. Ada. aged about 15. 
lies in hospital in High Uiver in a 
precarious condition. 

Tho party were touring on holidays 
r.nd had been staying at t'outts, Alta. 

the intention of 

Ing to ('algary 
When w'ilhln 27 ml’cs of their oh- 
jecliJe they met tragedy, due. it is 
thought, to the driver being blinded 
by the oblique rays of the setting 
sun as he made his way in a north¬ 
westerly direction over the crossing. 

Fanners Seek Relief 

Nearly 5]illloii I>olt:irH DiiuuiKe From 
Floods In Southern .Mujiltoha 

Winnipeg. One hundred nnd fifty 
farmers of the Sperling District in 
Southern Manitol)a. claiming to have 
sulTered loss to their crops amount¬ 
ing to nearly a million dollars this 


Jan Hiiiiils Wants l^irgnr \^hlle 
INipntiitlon For South Africa 
t-apo Town. A strong plea for a 
vigorous Immigration policy for the 
Hnlon of South Africa was made by 
former iTemier General Jan Smuts, 
lender of the opposition, In a speech 
at Heinz. Orange River Colony. 

"South Africa must throw’ open 
wide Its doors to immigration, for a 
larger white population is the best 
solution of the 'ptjor w'hite' pro¬ 
blem,” he said. ''We slum'd open our 
doors as the Hnited Slates an<l Aus¬ 
tralia did." 

"South Africa is often inclined to 
talk big and boost of no further im¬ 
migration being needed because the 
country is ovcr-poprlatcd ” Smuts 
said. "Just ns we laugh at our fore¬ 
fathers so win our descendants laugh 
at Ihe present absurd restrlrtlons on 
immigration.” 

Expedition Well Equipped 



Preparations Being Made 
In Paris For Signing 
Of Kellogg Peace Pact 


Dr. J. H. Cotton, of Toronto, was 
elected president of the National 
Council of the Native Sons of Can¬ 
ada at their annual meeting in Re¬ 
gina. Dr. (Tot ton is the first eastern 
member of the organization to be ap¬ 
pointed to the presidency. Formerly 
he was appointed to the vlce-presl- 
dency of the counril. 


1 

Receives Re-Appointment 

Dr. Mel/oan To lie Chief 

( omniisHloner Of Ua't Board 
Ottawa. Dr. Simon J. McLean, Ot¬ 
tawa. has been re-appoInted assist¬ 
ant rbiof commissioner of the board 
of railway commissioners. Dr. Mc¬ 
Lean's term of ofllco expln*d August 
ft. and his re-appointment is for a fur¬ 
ther period of ten years. Dr. McLean 
was originally appointed to the bo.ird’aign the treaty, (’ontinued hints that 


Paris. With the signing of the 
Kedlogg outlawry of war pact now 
only ten days off. Premier I*olnonie 
has lal<l his plans for the ceremonies, 
at the same time ordering his ran- 
Inel to Paris for an extraordinary 
session on Thursday. 

Tho French government does not 
expect to be caught unprepared for 
any situation which may arise out 
of the gathering here of the states¬ 
men of the fifteen nalion.s which will 


C'oinmiiiKler Byrd's Antarctic Ven¬ 
ture May Cost One .Million 

Dollars I 

New York. The Anlaretic expedi-'Tft TaLp Pafp Of 
.lion of Commander Richard K. Hyrd. | 
which starts from this port thls| 
week, will be tho most extensive ex-1 
pedition in the history of exploration* 
and may cost one million dollars. 

At the expedition’s headquarters 
here, it was said the cost would be 
not less than $8.55.000. nnd before I 
the expedition returns to.this coun¬ 
try may reach $1,000,000. 

('ontribiillons received to date In¬ 
clude $135,000 worth of ' equipment 
and $237,.543 In cash. 

The loUil expen.se of Commander 
r.yrd’s North Polo exi)editlon in 1920 
was $140,000. 


British Harvesters 


in 1908. 

The term of Commissioner Frank 
Oliver will terminate toward the end 
of Sop.lemi)er. when Mr. Oliver will 
have reached the age limit of 73 
years. 

Dr. McLean drafted the Dominion 
Railway Act, and his re-nppolntment 
for a third term creates a precedent. 
Since the formation of the Board of 
Railway Commissioners in 1904, Dr. 


some of the visiting diplomats plan 
to Io!>by their pel troubles and prob¬ 
lems in tho (^iiai D’Grsay during 
Ihe gathering is generally said to be 
the real reason for Poincare’s sud¬ 
den stimmoning of his cabinet. 

It in I’onsidered here that there 
are far inyre important problents 
which could be raised In the hall¬ 
ways of the (^ual D’Or.say than the 
cpiestion of evacuation of the Hhinc- 


foc drainage relief. 

Ac<’ording to a spokesman for the 
distressed farmers, approximately 100 
seolioiiH of land wore inundated dur¬ 
ing June and July, de.stroying grain 
after it was in the head, and ruined 
grazing lands. 

The government is being urged to 
reconstruct its drainage system in 
the affected area. Premier John 
Blacken and Hon. W. U. Clubb, min¬ 
ister of public w’orks, follow’ing a I 
trip of Inspection of the flooded 
lands, promised early consideration 
of the request. 

Fuller Party Reported Safe 

Have Been UeprovlMloned and .\rc 
Nm\ Headed For Shores Of 
llud'<'un Bay 

Regina, Rask Tnree W’ceks ago 
Ihe John I). Fuller expedition of stu¬ 
dent geologists from Iowa into the 
norlh was safely launched on a new 


Aerial Sham Warfare 

Two Accidents Was Ihe Result Of the 
Manoeuvres Over London 

London Kng. The aerial sham 
warfare over London, in which hun- 
dred.s of ’i»lanes have been engaged 
lor four days, was marred by the first 
two accidents of the manoeuvres. No 
one was hurt. 

Flying Officer L. C. Bennett was 
forced to jump in a parachute when; 
his ’plane burst iyto flumes over 
Richmond. He landed safely on a 
house top. A ' laiding" iiomber. en¬ 
gaged in an attai k on Ixjndon, made 
a forced landing in a lield and was 
damaged, but the pilot and observer 
escaped without a scratch. 


KfTorl Will Be Mode To l>ro\ide 
Permanent Work Tlmuighoiit 
Winter 

Sa.skatoon. Sask. If the British 
miners who are coming to the west 
to work in the harvest lields do not 
obtain peiinanent W’ork throughout 
the W'inter it will not be the fault of 
the railway companie.s or w ant of ef¬ 
fort on their part. 

No stone w’lll be left unturned to 
try to ko(p these men here nnd in 
the opinion of T. Devlin, local man¬ 
ager of tho Canadian National colon¬ 
ization department, future immigra¬ 
tion from the British Isles depends 
largely on the success or failure of 
this venture. 

Mr. Devlin said that ho could see 
no leason why the project .should not 
prove an outstanding success. "The 
men who are coming are by no mean .1 
strangers to hard work and they 
know just as much about farm w’ork 
a.« the average harvester from Kasl- 
ern Panada." he says. 


McLean has been the only commls- land which it has been suggested the 
sioner to be re-appointed after ex-^ foreign minister Stresc- 

' mann might bring up in his conver¬ 
sations with the other sliytcsmen. 

I Although it is known that U.S. 
that lesgislation may possibly be ppcrelary of Slate Kellogg does not 
Introduced at the next session of Par- - ^anl to <liscuss at the meeting ex- 
liament providing for the superan-1 outlawry of war, France does 


pirallon of the ten-year term. 

While no official statement has 
been made in the mutter, it is rumor¬ 
ed 


nuation of members of the >>oard. 


All Bitterness Forgotten 


III 


Will Be Buried In North 


Successful Expedition 


flohn Hornby and Companions To Be 
Interred .\t Spot Where They 
I'erlshed 

Ottawa.—The bodies of John Horn¬ 
by and his companions. Ade^urd and 
(’hristian, wi.l probably be burled at 
the spot where they perished on the 
shores of the Thelon River. It is a 
practical impossibility to bring the 
bodies back to civilization, particu- 


Rentarkabh' Tolerance Is Shown 

lrl»»h Free Shite I 

Victoria. B.P. Right Hon. Hugh. 
Kennedy, chief justice of Ireland and 
honorary member of American nnd 
Panudian Bar Associations, was the 
guest-speaker at the Panadian (Tlub 
luncheon here. i 

"We had a tight with Kngland but • 
that tight terminated in a treaty of 
peace, and a reconciliation was 
leached which I believe ha.s wiped 
out the rancor which existed in the 
past," the chief ju.slice said. 

One of the tirsl steps in the re¬ 
organization of the country was 
placing agriculture on a firm basis, as 
agriculture for years to come would 
continue a.s the foundation of pros¬ 
perity in Ireland, he said. 

He said that the Free Stale had 
sliosvn a remarkable dtgree of lolcra-, 
tion with the test of religion never, 
entering into politics. As an ex-* 
ample, he referred to the fact that I 


not want to be confronted with some 
one else’s problem, even informally, 
without knowing what to do. 

There arc official intimations that 
Pzecho-Slovakia will be represented 
by foreign minister Kdwaid Bones 
and that foreign minister August 
Zalowskl, of Poland, will si|^n for 
that country. Herr Stresemann. of 
course, will sign for Germany. 

President Cosgrave, of the Irish 
Free Slate, is said to have decided to 
go to Paris during tho signing of the 
pa<*t in order to meet Secretary 
Kellogg and return with Kellogg as 
far ns Duolin on the cruiser Detroit, 
which will take the American secre¬ 
tary of state back to the United 
States. It is not yet known whether 
Co.'^giave will sign the pact as his 
governmenl's official representative. 


Praises Pool System 


Kayn Hus 

Re\oIiitI«)nl/«‘d .Morale Of Farm¬ 
ing t'omniunity 

Williamstown, Moss.— Agricultural 


co-operation is not merely a market- 
the minister of finance was a piesby-' ing device but a means of lifting the 


Amerieaii lApeflitioii To Central 
AsUi Makes \ aluahle DineoverieH 
Peking. Roy ('hnpman, leader of 

the fourth central Asiatic expedition.' larly at this time of the year. Mount- 
land shorter rofito to Hudson bay. The returned to Peking after covering 5 ,-' cd Police officials stated today. Diir- 
I four men, who have been almost giv- miles on what he described aS|lDK the winter months dog sleds 

I cn up as dead for the past six weeks, one of the most .succes.sful ti Ips ever 
' have been reprovisioneil and given made. 

The chief prize of the expedition i.s 
tho fossilized skull, teeth and shoul¬ 
der bones of a pre-historic monster 


teriun from an Orange county. 


Mtuitreal (iarnieiit Workers Quit 
Montreal. Twelve hundred em¬ 
ployees and 70 work shup.s in Mon- the trail. They are 

treal arc affected by the 

"stoppage of work of loial immbers Lakes and smaller bodies of 

of the AmulguinaleJ ( luthing " 1^', ^vut er and down the Thlewlaza Riv¬ 

ers of America. It is not spoken of 
as a strike by union officials becau.se 


with a saddle-shaped head. "The 


not all the shops of the city are af 
fected. Speedy termination of the dis¬ 
pute is expec ted. 


St 


C'hiireli Is Deseerated 

Jerome, (.juc. Vandals entered 


the Roman (Tuthokc ('hurch here and 
laid waste many sacred urtiehs. Sa¬ 
cred vesse'.K were thrown around the 
4 lialice and the main body of the 
church, while the priests’ vc.stments 
were torn and slashed and scattered 
around the ediliee. A cliaiice contain- 
ing the Host wa.s broken to pieces. 


rr tp Hud.son Pay. They are expected specimen is of the most culussa! anl- 
lo emerge near Driftwood Point, half- ninl that ever existed," Mr. Andrews 
way between Chesterfield Inlet, their said. ’Tt is unknown to science. 
Itrst objective, and Fort ('hurchill. Only part of its heau bones alone 

-- weigh more than 500 pounds." 

Land In <Tlmea Fop .l4»,\s ' ' ■" v “ 

Moscow, PwUssia. In adilition to 
the land already appropriated for 
Jewish colon ;:alion. the presidium of. 
the all-Russian executive has granted 
100 000 hectares of land 4upproxi-! 
mutely 272..500 acres) in the (Tiinea , 
for 15.000 Jewi.sh families. The de-i 
cisioii was prompted by the success 
of Jewish farming eolonies organized 
in recent years. 


might be used but it is regarded 
doubtful if even this method would 
be feasible. 

Identification of the explorer and 
the other members of the party is 
positive, it is staled. Papers on the 
bodies assistc<l in the identification. 

In order to effect the buiial 
Mounted Ptrlico officers will have to 
travel west 300 miles from Chester¬ 
field Inlet. 


BRITISH STUDENT HARVESTERS 


Heavy Toll Of Life Taken 
As Natives Of North 
Succumb To ’Flu Epidemic 


Kdmonton. Scourging the pcpula- teepees with 
lion along the bunks of the Macken-1 ^ly *^11 dead, 
zie River, the influenza epidemic i 
wliich has been raging in the North 
for some time has taken a lu'.I of 273! 
of the native pojiulutioii within a ]>er-1 
iod of a couple of w’eeks, accotding 
to u report received in }*J<lmt>nton. ' 

Ah far us is known only one w'hite ! 
man has succumbed to thb disease. 

A total of .53 are now known U ; 
havi‘ succumbed at Fort Simpson 
alone, according to a radio message ‘ 
received by Jack Stewart, a trapper 
at that p(i^t. The message was sent 
by a man named Hherwin. 

1'he full total of the deaths caused 
by tile disease may not be known 
for months until police patrols and 
liajipers returning to their lines 


their occupants possi* 



Inspect Australian Ship i 

12,000 IN'opIt* VIhII New C'ruKor 
During Stay .\t Miiiitreal 
Montreal. H.M.A.S. Australia, 
flagship of tho Royal Australian 
Navy, sailed for (Quebec following a 
visit of several days to Montreal. It 
i.s estimated that 12.000 persons vis¬ 
ited the new cruiser while she was 
here. 

The Australia will remain at Que- 
bec four days, follow’ing w'hich slic 
will proceed to Halifax, which will be 
visited on August 22. Other jilaces tc 
he visited ini hale Bo.ston. August 25; 
New York. Augu.sl 30: Cfu-sapeake 
Hay, September 4; Colon. Sepumoer 
I'l: rahita. September 20 ; Wellington 
N.Z.. October 9; Brisbane. Auurana. 
October 17; Sydney, N.S.W., October 
23. 


farmer to a plane of greater prosper¬ 
ity and keeping him there. Prof. C. R. 
Fay. of the University of Toronto, 
told the Institute of Politics here. 

"In ('anada," he said, "the wheat 
pool h.'is revolutionized the morale 
of the farming community', relieving 
the farmer of the difficulty of de¬ 
riding when to sell, eliminating the 
pressure to sell at certain seasons, 
and basing all farm marketing on 
statistical knowh d';e." 

The co-operative- system he de- 
i lared, is of special benefit to tho 
small farmeis. whose plane of living 
has been raised to the highest level 
it ever re'ichcd. 

In the Unile'd States the govern- 
inenfs atliiude toward the farmers 
))i()hlems is one of encouragement 
thiough active assistanct' in research 
anti cduratiimal facilities, C. L. 
Christensen, chief of the deiiartmcnt 
of ca-rperative maiKelir.g of the de¬ 
partment of agricuhuie, said. 


High Paracliiite .I'unp 
Washington. D.C. William F. 
Scott, navy chief mathinists' mate, 
leaped 1.5,2U0 feet in a parachute re¬ 
cently, landing unhurt on the roof of 
a four story apartment block. He 
climbed dow’n the Are escape. He is 
seeking to break the world’s para¬ 
chute record of nearly 2r>,.50U feet. 


Mint' Blast Is I'atal 
Calgary'. L. L. Johnson, for ycnr’i 
chairman of the Department of Sol¬ 
diers’ Civil Re-establishment at Cal¬ 
gary’. was instantly killed when a 
charge of dynamite exploded prema¬ 
turely in Mr. Johnson's mmc at 
Dodds, ‘Alta., according to Infoima- 
llon received here. 


London, Kng. It 
that in view’ of tho 
Lord Hailsham. loid 


is unnouiK'ed 
appointment of 
chancellor, as 


Tho points along the Mackenzie; 
that have been badly hit are: Fort, 

Resolution, with 30 cUaths; Fort, 

Simpson, 33; Fort Hue, 33; Fort Nor¬ 
man. 28; Fort (ioodhope, 20; and 
I'brt McPherson. 21. Deaths ul oth-' 

41 points have alsoj^cen heavy'. 

Northmen say that the natives are 
apathetic when attacked by the dis¬ 
ease, Kitting moaning and w>'uihng' in, 

their camps and cab ns. instead of British university students seeking information, experience and ad-* hxn been appointed ciiuirmun of the 
making an efTorl to light the sick-, venture are coming to Canada to help with the harvest in the West this Uidted Kingdoms to the 

ness. 'They throw away the drugs year and places for them are being found by the colonization department meetings of the Kmplre jiarhamenl- 
given them by medical men and mis- of the Canadian National Railways. If they are all of the type of the first Association in Canada in the 
sionaries b4*cause it does not effect four to arrive ’in the West both Canada and Great Britain should gain by b‘*xl few’ w'eeks. 

an immediate cure and wait patient-J their enterprise. The photograph shows the advance guard of four of these Viscount Peel is lirst cummissiunei 
ly, either to die or to recover. young men. From left to right, with the places where they are being works in the government and has 

Only one while man has died in stutioned, they are: W. D. Harrison (Marcelin, Sask.): K. A. Corcoran tWel- held numerous uppoinlmeiUs from 
the North from the disease so far as <ion. Sask.); F. W. Beale (Carlea. Sask.); aud J. D. Preston-Jones (Alwaler. IbOO. He was under secretary of state 


Heads British Delegation 
To The Parliamentary 

Association Meet 


acting prime minister in the ab.sc^nce 
of Premier Baldwin, Viscount Peel 


among the hills and bunen land And | h^s been reported. 


Bask.-. 


k fur 

4 


war from 1919 to 192-1. He is 


ol years of age. Tho prime minister 
having expreased a strong desire 
thni the United King4.1om d"legali4>n 
rluiulil include two members of the 
g')V4-niment. tho association has in- 
Vit4>il Hen. P. G. Williams, parlia¬ 
mentary secretary to the board of 
liade t4> Join the delegation. 

Tb.e delegation Is expected t4> ar- 
livo at (.Quebec on August 2t, and in 
4 (»mpany w’ith other Kinpire delegu- 
tions will make u transcontinental 
lour of the Dominion before leaving 
Sydney, N.S., on October 5. 

W. N. u. 1747 









♦#f ♦ 



Wonderful 

Northland 


Take X-Ray IMate 

Of Mummy 


foblk Mart Be Exiled 


1.1 r.vr. -GOvrUNOR 


Raising Thrifty 
Heifer Calves 


ScIrntNtA I'owil To Admit Th.il 
Thry Knnn IJtttr Ahoiif It 

Kxlstenct* of life :%m\ stianfe or un¬ 
usual happenings in U. are more a 
matter of chance or Inch, iltscount- 
ing somewhat the former scientiftc 
lheor>' that phenomena resiiUetl from 
cause ;uid effect. Dr. D \V. Swann, 
of rhiludelphia, declared, lie said 
that while swlenre been aWe to 

see the workings of life. U Is at a 
loss to define clearly its beginning. * 

The statement of Dr. Swann, \\4in 
is director cf the Itartun Kuuialalinn 
Inslitvite. Philadelphia, had a start¬ 
ling ofTcrt among nian>’ nicmbt'ra of 
the American Chemical Society Insti¬ 
tute. which ho in attending. 

"It hiis been known for some lime 
lint some of the molecules of the air 
are olcclrically charged." he said 
"Yet when we come right down to 
actual figure.'^ only twie in one luin- 
.ired billion is so charged. 

"There is no npini'ent reason why 
one of these air moleH.'ulos, rather 
than any other, should hu\c this elec¬ 
trical charge, whiih makes possible 
l.ghlniiig. thunder, rain and other 
happenings of the air. Science has 
been able to account for Uds in no 
oUier way than by explaining the 
phenomenon in terms of luck which 
now has become a new type of scicu- 
lifle thought." 

KMHtcnco of life, Dr. Swann said, in 
applying the same reasoning, may 
have started by cham e. 

"Kilher one accepts the view of 
creation handed <lown by the Bible," 
he explained, "or c’ae the scientist 
no<ls his head and says he cannot 
answer the question. Life processes 
may have started by pure chance. 

"Once atarteil. s<‘ience ha.s been ;iblc 
to sec the workings of life. Ihit as 
for getting any clear conception of 
the beginnings, we arc at a loss ” 


Chances For Success Of Prohlbl- 
Uoa Eost Wtfti the Voulti 
Prohibition rest Its choncoa for suc¬ 
cess upon the education of public 
opinion, delegates to the Institute of 
Politics agreed in a round tsd>lc con¬ 
ference on the lastie at Wllllamstown, 
Mass. The dry lawn of several na¬ 
tions. notably Canada, Sweden and 
England, were outlined by speakers. 

Professor C. P. Fay, Toronto, be¬ 
lieved that the Canadian provinces 
had taken a wise course In adopting 
government control of liquor. 

"Drink has been the greatest single 
curse of the RngHsh-speaking people 
in the last 150 years," he said. "We 
have failed in our efforts to eradi¬ 
cate It in that wc have not had the 
youth of the country with us. 

"Youth feels a restriction In talk¬ 
ing of prohibition for fear of of¬ 
fending its elders. It should be en¬ 
couraged to say freely what it thinks 
of the moral Issue involved. There 
has been much impnovement in Ekig- 
land on the question of drinking, 
largely liecausc of the steady greavth 
of public opinion against the prac¬ 
tice. 


oou'.c; * ng About the New Prince 
Albert National Park 
4''.ravitans had a gouil laugli at 
ti»c Imiris* v. lu> orri^x•d in July from 
s“'Mcv.hfie 5<Hi*.li of the lH>n!rr line 
v-i.iippeil with skis and a toboggtin 
1 1 *' - xpcv't!*! to tind snow. Aln)Ut 
|iu: tiire an observation station on 
llud ' ll Mtrait rccordtHl the tempem* 
H!’»’ outtkr.'ca ol over VO degree.**. 
Many Canndian }>eoplo hardly ap¬ 
preciate the |K>ssibi.llies of the v\'on- 
; fnl norlhland beyond the present 
mnrg n of cailtivation The ^oj>cniiig 
of a new national park area, ttns* 
kiitchewan's summer jilaygroiind. f»00 
miles ii<»rlh of the international bor¬ 
der. may help to give the people of 
ihe entire North Anierican Omfinont 
a liroailet view of the Northern hori- 


Interesting Experiment Is Con¬ 
ducted At McGill University 

After rscliotng maay years in 
peace, Hawarael-Maktaa, Rgyptlan 
mummy at the McGill Strathcona 
museum, has been the subject of an 
X-ray photograph taken by R, Lionel 
Judah, curator of the McGill Mu¬ 
seums. The embalmed body of the 
ancient lady arrived at McGill In 
1897, clad cumfosia^ly In mummy 
wrappings, having been presented to 
Ihc university by Sir Thomas Rod¬ 
dick. It cAme from Fayoum, Egypt, 
and is one of three miunmies at pres¬ 
ent "at home" in the Strathcona Mu¬ 
seum. 

One mummy is that of a princess 
elaborately bound in the choicest of 
linen, and another is that of a com¬ 
moner roughly bound and embalm¬ 
ed with bituminous pitch Instead of 
spices. The lady*8 mummy, which 
was partly unwrapped in order that 
the X-ray photographs could be tak¬ 
en more rapidly, shows a medium 
condition of rank between the two, It 
is stated at the museum. The wrap¬ 
pings of linen are not nearly as fine 
as that used for the princess and 
the specimen shows more of a bitu¬ 
minous pitch than of a spice embalm¬ 
ing. 

There is no gold directly placed on 
the face as there is on the princess 
n*ummy, but there is a gold-leaf 
mask covering the entire upper part 
of the mummy with a face painted 
on it, for which vegetable dyes had 
been u.scd. 

The X-ray photograph revealed a 
normal human skeleton. Unquestion¬ 
ably the specimen is that of a wo¬ 
man ranging In age between 25 amt 
40 years; the arms are folded across 
the chest, whereas in the other two 
specimens at McGill the arms are 
bound close to the sides. Hawara-el- 
Muktaa has an excellent set of teeth, 
her bones are well-knit and there Is 
no evidence of a fracture often seen 
in X-ray photographs. The plate of 
the skull showed a peculiar shaped 
window, through which the brain was 
; probably removed for the embalming. 

llie X-ray has been found useful 
in the study of mummies because of 
the material Information that can be 
obtained without injury to the sub¬ 
ject. If all wrappings are removed, 
the body rapidly decomposes, but the 
use of the X-ray has made it unnecei- 
. sary to remove these coverings, and 
I the risk of decompoeitlon is obviated. 


Proper Rearing Of Calves a Mat¬ 
ter Of Great Importance 
The keen demand for young cows 
of first grade quality Justlllee not 
only that the stock be well bred but 
that the calves be reared in a way to 
encourage a steady and fairly rapid 
growth. At the Central KxperimcnUl 
Farm, the rearing of the calves is rc- 
gsrded as a matter of great Import¬ 
ance. and they are so fed and han¬ 
dled as to keep them thriving until 
they develop into good cows. Details 
of the manner of feeding arc con¬ 
tained in the re|>ort of the Dominion I 
Animal llusbundman for last year, 
leccntly issued by the Department or 
Agiiculturo. at Ottawa. The calf gets 
its mother's milk for scvcrnl days, 
and whole milk in continued for fromj 
four to eight weeks, depending on 
the strength and viguor of the calf.' 
The change from whole to skim ^ 
milk is made gradually over a period 
of one two weeks. To replace the 
fat of the new milk In the skim milk I 
ration calves receive a porridge or' 
giuel made from lngTe<lients of dif¬ 
ferent kinds. A favorite mixture 
consists of flax see<! meal, 1 part;' 
ground siftoil oats. 2 parts; and ftne-^ 
ly ground corn, 2 parts. The meal is, 
prepared by stirring It Into a pall of | 
hoot water, care l>eing taken to avoid j 
lumpiness Siifhcient Is made up at 
one time for a day’s feeding and af¬ 
ter it l>ecome3 cold It Is warmed up 
when added to the skim milk. The| 
calves are startent with about a ta-1 
hlespoonfiif <»f this porridge or gruel I 
at a feed, gradually Increasing the; 
amount fed until they are getting a 
go<Kl sized t'lipful at a fee<i at three 
or four month.** of age. It Is fed in 
the skiin-milk. which is given iiij 
quantiltes of from twelve to fifteen; 
pounds per day. Great care should | 
be tHkeii to prepare the food properly j 
and tt) see that the calves get suffl-' 
cient hut not too much. j 

About the time that the feeiiing of 
skim-milk begins the calves are glN-' 
en a little dry gniln mixture each; 
day. A favorite mixture consists ofi 
one part each of ground oats, distil-' 
Ids’ grain, oil cake meal, and twi'oj 
parts of bran. This is started in very j 
small (pmntities and gradually in-j 
crea.**ed up to two i^unds per dayj 
when the calves reach the age of from 
four to five months. They are also 
taught to eat hay. preferably leafy 
clover or alfalfa. 


rnnre AU)crt National Tark, os 
ailed. 13 about 1.400 


the new park is c 
square miles in extent. U can he 
ti'Mchevl by nmtor rond from the at- 
».-ictive prairie town of Prmce Al¬ 
bert. One of the finest lakes in the 
park. Lake Waskesui. is about sev* 
eaty miles north of Prime Albert. 
P.i'niilifid lakes and stn*anis nlMiund 
ihvMigh the noilherii area of the 
park. It is indeed, one gateway to 
tVinada s vast hinterland of virtually 
unexplordi country west of Hud.‘*on 
Biy As in other national piirk.*^ 
Prince Albert Park is a game sanc¬ 
tuary throughout the year. It is one 
ol Ihe nesting places of pelican and 
cormorant, as well as of duck, loon 
uud other birds. The undisturbed 
wcxkKs are the home of black bear, 
licer and moose. The v.*>od’ands are 
largely of while birch, jack pine and 
while .‘ipiuce; prairie flowers al.so be¬ 
deck the landsinpc 

The white sand beaches of the lake 
in Saskatchewan’s northern pli^y* 
griuiud date back fixun before the 
lii.ic of the glaciers, whm geological 
i.^ords tell ol the sea ^hore.s to the 
west of the laiurcntian shield. North- 
e»n Cana«la ceased to be an Iceboumi 
laud of perpetual winter alwul the 
Xi'.nv of the i^issing of the lost ice 
hut the i>elicf about "the frozen 
North" has lingcro*! on. Adven¬ 
turous tourists to the Prince Albert 
I'ark arc cautioned, however, to lake 
provisions and camping equipment 
with them and to go prepared to live 
la the open Christian Science Moni¬ 
tor 


A I'liie Tribute la Paid To the Fol -1 
lowerH Of the lleuJIng Art 

There are men and classes of men 
who stand above the common herd: 
the soldier, the sailor and the shep¬ 
herd not infrequently; the artist 
rarely. rarcHer still the clergyman, 
the physician almost as a rule; be is 
the flower t surii as It is) of our 
civiliEatlon; and when the stage of 
man is done with, and only remem¬ 
bered to be marvelled at in history, 
he will be thought to have shared 
as little as any in the defects of the 
period, and most notably exhibited 
the virtues of the race. Generosity 
he has. such as is {>osHible to those 
who practice an art. never to those 
who drive 'a trade; discretion tested 
by a hundre<l secrets; tact, tried in 
a thousand embarrassments; and 
what is more important, heroic 
cheerfulness and courage. So it is 
that he brings air and cheer into the 
sick-room, and often enough, though 
not as often as he wishes, brings 
healing 


Sir Lonier CKniin. former minister 
of justice, reported to have accepted 
the lieutenant-governorship of Que¬ 
bec in succession to Hon. Nare;jspe 
Pei'iKleau. Tlie a>H>ve picture of Sir 
Lonier is one just taken ut his sum¬ 
mer home in Murray Hay. Que. 


Wonders Of the Ductless Glands 


Seienee .Makes <»reat Discoveries. Rut 
SHU lias Long May To (io 

The public raid by the anaemu: on 
liver resembles the buttermilk raid 
of a few years ago to gel the longe¬ 
vity germ. Dr. David Klein. Chicago 
chemist, told the Anierican Chemical 
Society at Chitxigo. 

Liver uiid onions, liver uiul l>acon 
calf's liver uud a multitude of other 
livers aic demauded in the big as-, 
sault. It is now* scarce and high, a .**-' 
vending on the menu from an also- 
ran |>osition to one next l>eefsteak. 

Dr. Klein descril)e<l the wonders of 

1 

the ductless glands. Only two of these j 
substances, he pointed out. have l>eeul 
isolatetl in pure form and pTe|>ar«al 
outside the body. These are Ihyrox n 
from the thy'roid glund. and eplne- 
phrioi. from the suprarenal. 

"It is estimated that an adult has 
only about l-40.4>0(i of a pound of| 
Ihyro.xin in Ins whole system." said I 
the chemist. "Vet that small quanti¬ 
ty in sufficient. Without it we would* 
all be drooling idiots. 

The chase for the little somethings ! 
of our gland.s. it was explained, goes | 
merrily on. Hut science ha.sn't been 
able to make much headway against 
nature. 

"Of course," continued Dr, Klein, 
"WC know something about the other 
Knowledge medicinally. We now use 
glands, too, and wc t an apply the 
insulin from the sweetbread, pituitary 
extract from the small gland near 
the brain, parathyroid extract from 
the tiny bodies near the thyroid, liv¬ 
er extract, pepsin from the stomach 
trypsin and diastase from the pan- 
. creos and rennet from the vuirs 
stomach. 

! "On the near horizon loom other 
' discoveries. But w'e still have a 
long way to go." 


Heligoland 


\4trth l> < niinh 


I anions 

ling Into the Sr:i 

The little North Sea Island which 
Britain gave to l*ru.«sla long ago. 
despite general doubt an*! much pro- 
te.**t, nnd which, many yc.irs later 
took so prominent a part in the 
World War. is crumbling Into the 
sea. U will be remembered that the 
Germans transformed the peaceful 
Island into an impregnable fortress 
By the Treaty of Versailles compul¬ 
sory dcniantUng was insisted on. The 
tearing away of enormous masses of 
concrete and masonry not only re¬ 
verted to. but intensified the crumb¬ 
ling processes. Now a sum <»r about 
a million dollars is to lie sepent on 
the work of maintaining the sand 
dune.*, and the German Helvh is. also, 
ennying out extensive protection 
constructions. The electric plant 
situnte<l on the harlxir. is so badly 
threatened that its removal inlana 

cliffs 


Socialist Moderation 


striking (hanges .Are Ser«i In 
SM'laUat Methods 

The resort to a more constitutioual { 
policy is one of the striking changes 
in Socialist methods. The change is 
evidently rather deeper than one of. 
tactics, and some of the principles 
on which at one time leading Social¬ 
ists were very emphatic are now be¬ 
ing modified. The latest illustration 
is afforded by Mr. Ramsay MacDon¬ 
ald's attitude to emigration. At one 
time emigration was denoimvcd as 
a capitalist device to rid the country 
of a troublesome lot of workers; now 
Mr. MacDonald admits that the par¬ 
ty recognizes that fluidity of popu¬ 
lation is necessary. Some people take 
a long time to discover what others 
learn In their youth Edinburgh 
Scotsman. 


B.C. Apples In Demand 


.Natiw* Of t'c'ntrul .Viiierh'u rhtuighl 
Spuniith linaders Were Immortal 
Scientific research is nut n modern 
innovation Years ago when the 
Spaniards were first invading Cen¬ 
tral America the natives speculated 
whether the white men were indeed 
children of the sun god and therefore 
immortal, or if thc> cou d die like or¬ 
dinary men. The way Spanish, ar¬ 
mor repelled native dai t.s cncouriiged 
the sun god theory, hut in the little 
village of Uio Guanrub i, in Porto 
Rico, the Indiana put their theory to 
the test in by immersing an old 

Spanish nobleman under water and 
holding him there fur six hours to sec 
if it vvou'.d kill him. It did! 


Value Of AdvertUmg 


.Are Held In HlgTi Regard On the 
European Markets j 

British Columbia apples in gen¬ 
eral are held in high regard on all 
Kiiiopvun markets where visited, 
RlutCR J. Forsyth Smith, Canadian 
Fruit Trade ('onimissioner, Liverpool. 
Faiglund. special compliments having 
been paid to the qualities of certain 
particular brands in Norway. Den¬ 
mark and Sweden. The market offer¬ 
ed hy these little countries is a limit¬ 
ed one as compared with Great Bri¬ 
tain. hut the demand is keen and full 
advimlage should be taken of It. 


will prove necessary. The 
overhKiking the plant may at any 
moment fall and de.slroy it. In Vic ¬ 
torian day.** Heligo’aud was u lUiiv- 
ing holiday resoH and an mtei na¬ 
tional watering place 


ITeUl To I-'loiir In Four Ibi^s 
From field to flour in four day's 
was the record establi.shed by Stuart 
Shouldioe, an Ontario farmer, who 
wa.«* among the first in North Grey 
to harvest his w'heat. He cut the 
wheat in the middle of the week. By 
Friday it was Ihresherl. and Satui- 
duy it w*as sold to a local milling 
firm and milled into flour. Mr. 
Shouldlce received $1.20 per bushel 
for his crop of 400 bushels. The en¬ 
tire crop graded No. 1. 


A violin that plays itself has been 
perfected by M. Gabriel Borcan and 
Emile Aubry, tw'o French engineers. 


t'uhiinlila, u Great le<*fit'ld 
The extension of 980 square miles, 
made to Jasper National Park, Al¬ 
berta, in 1927, brought ihe Columbia 
icefield within national park boun¬ 
daries. This giant icefield, one hun¬ 
dred and twenty-five miles in extent, 
which is the mother of more than a 
score of glaciers, is surrounded by ti 
galaxy of giant peaks and represenU 
the very climax of the scenic and al¬ 
pine features of the Rockies. 


Cannibals Use Irrigation 


Nali\«‘H of .New Guinea Have Devel 
o|N‘(l SynG'in Ky I ’■»ing Bamboo 
Bip4‘<« 

A survival of an ancient civiliza¬ 
tion co-existent w'ith the lowest 
(annibalism has been made by a pat - 
rol officer visiting the Wampit water¬ 
shed in New Guinea 

The cannibals, who had never seen 
firearms, had just finished a feast on 
iMidies after a tribal war. They had 
developed a system of terraced irri¬ 
gation along the lines of interlocked 
banilxx) pipes and acpieducts for the 
native gardens wiiich are 0,000 foci 
above sea level 


Mure than one-half the 2,71U miles 
of railways in Algeiia are now con¬ 
trolled by the government 


Great novel readers are nothing 
novel, but nowadays a new' great nov¬ 
el surely is a novelty. 


A man who is a friend only to him 
self has but few' friends. 


The ancient capital of Siam 
Ayuthia has i>een hidden in 
jungle for four centuries. 


Medal For tMyiuplc Stars 
In view of the ouiatanding achieve¬ 
ments of the men and girls on the 
Canadian Olympic learns, the Cana¬ 
dian Olympic Ctommittec is consider¬ 
ing the suggestion of striking a me¬ 
dallion with engravings of Percy Wil¬ 
liams, V'uncouver. and Ethel Cather- 
wood. Toronto, on one side, with the 
maple leaf on the other side. 


The mo:{quito bitelh alike the just 
and the unjust. 


Fools rush in w'hero w'lse men rush 


Mrs. Snap: "Are you familiar with 
the affairs of the family next door?*' 
Mrs. Snip: "WeU. we kept their 
oarrot for them while they were 


lan 


that w'hicli you now have w'ill be suf-; 
ficient to bring back the buffalo.' ' 
"1 was Uicn told to take some one 
with me and go in the opposite direc¬ 
tion to the sun. We both run like 
buffalos and soon came to tepees and 
stood in front of them. The Indians 
had all kinds of w’eapons, Imws and 
arrows and many strange ones, but 
they did not hurt us; the Great 
Spirit was near. Then we w'ent back 
to a small herd of buffalo that was 
near. We rolled In the dust and 
shook ourselves, and as we did so we 
could see the Indians' weapons fall to 
the ground. The Spirit again spoke 
and said, 'Should you even go to war 
you will be protected and the enemy 
will never hurl you 


Indian days at Banff recall some i 
of the old legends and the origin of ^ 
many of their ceremonials, and alao ^ 
why the Indian names were lukeu by i 
some of the tribe The following', 
btory was told the writer by George J 
Mac'ean. known as Walking Buffalo' 
among the Stoncys. \ 

The origin of George’s name was | 
narrated in bis cabin on the Morley j 
Reserve, thlity-hve miles East of, 
Banff, in the t.’anadian Uuckies. It | 

' was called a Dream Story and was; 
us follows: "When the sun comes half 
way up the mountain you will be go- j 
ing West, the Spirit said, but turn ^ 
and look toward the East. 1 did sol 


Literary men often suffer from 
writer’s cramp, but it is seldom dua 
to overwork in indorsing checks. 


As th«- ceiling said to the chan 
tlelicr, "Take it lightly, vou enn de 
pend on me. 


Idve Stock MarkeHiig 
The annual meeting of the Sas¬ 
katchewan Livestock Co-opciatvie 
Marketing Association was recently 
o|M.'ncd at Moose Jaw'. The associa¬ 
tion was shown from reports to have 
emerged from a year of splendid 
growth. During 1927 1,800 carloads 
of cuttle were handled by the associ¬ 
ation. 


hi the way of applau.-e. Hie best 
actor is always looking for a hand¬ 
out 


The huacUin. a bird found along 
Ihe Amazon River, has feet on its 
wings. 


With this last 
word Walking Buffalo added. "That’s 
story." 

t * * § might be added, In the buffalo 

M t t dance wtilch this Indian depicts so 

W I ^ alwaya uses a yellow paint 

f ' .J for face and body, yellow as clouded 

dust through w'hich the sun shines, 
roll with it. I did so and felt He of course has a buffalo headpiece 
iftalo, then 1 got up and tdiook and the costume is in keeping. In- 
, yellow dust fell off as the diuns have a reason for what they do, 
said, ‘there will be no more the Great Bpirit and nature are a 
given to you ut this time, but dominate factor in their lives. 


Don’t expose your Ignorauce by 
talking about thing.s you don’t under¬ 
stand. 


Tlie golden rule is frequently used 
in drawing a" line of conduct for oth¬ 
ers. 


"1 have found sonielxaiy w'ho is 
not grumbling about me trams." 

Who is it?" 

"\ deaf and dumb man.' II Tra- 
vaso Lome 


"We have found a cheat in the 
Club." 

"Have you expelled him?" 

‘Not yet. Wc haven’t learned Ids 
trick yet Die Musketc, Vienna. 


The toothache might i>e classed as 
a necessary evil w'hen you haven’t 
got it. 




















THE RECOUDKIJ, EAYMONI), AT/fA. 




knife Ihruit. nnd looking down, he 
! BRW the blood ninning <'fr bin flngerB. 

I Ibil he must hoc what happened. 

I Ho crawled to the cd^e of the trees 
j and looked hack. Three f^iinrcs wore 
I slandlnK toRother, talking excitedly. 
He could see nothing of Arthur, but 
the smoke of rifles still hung oround 
the pillars of the bridge. He crawled 
back Into the trees and lay on the 
damp leaves, sobbing like a child. 
He W’as free: he was safe; but the 
loss of his friend was heavy on his 
heart. 


Wrigley Marathon 


Countless tests and experi¬ 
ments, covering a period of 
over thirty years, prove that 
aluminum is the only com¬ 
pletely satisfactory material 
in which to pack tea. Red 
Rose tea is put up only in 
aluminum, and a **money- 
back” guarantee goes with 
every package. 3.W 


Four Channel Hwlmmers Are In the 
Third Wrlgley Swim 

Among the throe hundred odd on-! 
^rlcs received up-to-date by the' 
Can.-Kllan National F^xhlbttlon for the' 
Third Wrigley Mnralhoft, which car-, 
rie.s with It to the winner the world's i 
long distance swimming champlon- 
^hlp as well as a fair proportion of 
$50,000. ate four <?hannci conquer¬ 
ors. 

When Gertrude Kdcrle set a new 
mark in 1924, Lord Riddell, owner of 
the ‘News of the World” made an 
offer of £1,000 to the first Britisher 
to boat her time, man or woman. 
Norman Dcrham. after th.'ce futile 
attempts aecompished this, swim¬ 
ming the distance in 13 hotirs r>5 mln- 
tiloK. He is an entrant this year and 
i{#now in training at Hnnlan's Island. 
He Is a very strong swimmer ana 
seemingly immune to coid water. 

Georges Michel holds the record 
for a quick Channel crossing. He la | 
a k'reiK’hman, took second to Vier- 
koctier last year, and is again in 
(/'inada preparing for the hard fif¬ 
teen mile grind. The distance this 
year is short for Michel, but he must 
nevertheless be considered a serious 
ccMitender. 

I Mllle Gade Corson, of New York 
City, was the first mother to swim 
the British Channel. She la one of 
I the greatest women endurance sw’lm- 
■ mcra in the world and w'lil arrive in 
Toronto shortly to get accuaiomed to 

I 

; Ijiko Ontario. 

! Krnst Vierkoetter, the winner of the 
I Maratlion last year, has at last com¬ 
menced intensive training and it is 
f remarked by those who have seen 
him in».action that he has improved 
h.H style and speed since annexing 
the premier prize last year. 

The total entries now number con- 
sideiablv over 300. 


Us Aroma is 
Perfectly 
Delicious 


Packed in 
Varwum Airtight 
Tins 


CHAin’EU XXXI. I 

I 

It was a hot night in London in the 
early spring. The lights shone 
ghostly blue through their painted 
globes, and across the starless night 
search-lights stretched their spectral 
lingers, crossing, passing, converging, 
crossing again. Through the streets, 
In spite of the sombre gloom and the 
dangers of the night, an endless 
stream of people drifted, making a 
brave show of unconcern. The thea¬ 
tres were crowded, the dance halls 
echoed with rythmic feet, and tink¬ 
led with laughter; and aithough grief, 
fear, and a sense of loss walked with 
every soul in I.,ondon. the sound oi 
their ominous footfalls were drown¬ 
ed by^ laughter and singing, true to 
the brave old British tradition. 

At Victoria Station the V.A.D.’s 


THERE It nothing that has ever 
taken Aspirin’s place as an antidote 
for pain. It is safe, or physicians 
wouldn’t use it, and endorse its use 
by others. Sure, or several million 
users would have turned to something 
else. But get the real Aspirin (at any 
druRj^torc) with Bayer on the box, 
and the word gmuine primed in red; 


The Columbia Ice Field 


■'We’ll have a real meal later. 
Jack.” said his sister. “And now tell 
me where you have been.” 

“First," said Jack, "tell me how 
you lanppened to come over?" 

Kva laughed. “You will wonder. 
I know, but I couldn’t stand it after 
the o’.d crowd broke up and 1 guess 
I missed Humphrey, too. though 1 
won't admit it, because we had a row 
before he left, and he said things to 
me I shall never^^ forget. But any¬ 
way, everyone was knitting and mak¬ 
ing Imndages, and I couldn’t get into 
it. So I rented the house and I can 
liv easily here on the money. I real¬ 
ly like the work I am doing, and 1 
love the boys they are so brave. I 
bring them home with me sometimes 
and write lliolr letters and li.sten to 
their stories 


Teeth and Health 


Injur'd By Th« Cnnadinn P^ntal 
Hyiflrne Coiiricl! and 
By Tho Sa.«kntrlicwan Bvittal 
Socitey 


TIIK INCISORS 

You arc very particular to keep 
these eight front teeth (four upper 
n a and four lowen, white and sound, so 
y a their function, then to you. w’ould 
.j^^giseem largely csthetical. 

I Hut they have another use from 
j which they take their name that is 
- to incise, or rut. 

In your child you have seen them 
' erupt with three distinct tips or lu- 
I borcies. which by and by have W’orn 
I down to leave a straight rutting 
fro edge 

ICiJ This notching is a purely normal 
development, being due to the calci¬ 
fication of the enamel covering from 
ing three separate centres. Now', you 
one have noticed too. with perhap.s no 
few* Utile concern, that upon eruption, the 
lose tw’o upper front teeth (central Inrls- 
om-!ors) seemed quite out of proportion 
the ‘ to the size of the face, giving them 
leve an ungainly appearance, 
md- But you must rmember this that 
nild while the face will grow larger, the 
lore teeth will not increase in size so Na- 
e is ture has planned with foresight as 
the you might have guessed, 
hey' Now try this; consult a mirror, 
sold and note the shape of your face. To 
I on which of the three types does it in- 
. by dine, tapering, oval or square? Then 
Co..' study the form of your upper cen- 
klet tral incisor imagine It inverted, and 
and observe that it conforms to the shape 
any of your face. Nature is very attentive 
to details, ever striving for harmony. 

Ucmenibcr then, that you must give 
redoubled zeal to the care of these 
incisors 


Aspirin 

«lif mirlr 

nd'-ating Rayar Maniifartnrr Whll* it ii 
•-II kno«n (hat Aat'iHii meana Itaw mann- 
fa'-t>ii^. Iri aaaiir* th« public acatnat imitatlnna. 
the Tabl»ta will b# aUtBpc'! with thtlr “Dayar 
Croaa" trad* matk. 


t have one little extia 
room and really. Jack. I never was 
so happy in my life. Now toll me your 
story." 

Jack told her of his capture, im¬ 
prisonment, esenpe, his friend Arthur 
Watner and his sacrifice. 

Eva’s eyeH w’ore filled w’ilh tears as 
she listened. "Oh, Jack, wa.sn’t he 
brave? But why did he do it why 
(lid he love you so?" 

“It WHS not for me it was his 
love for my wife!” 

“Why, Jack, I didn't know you 
were married. Now' begin at the be¬ 
ginning. Wait, do you want to go to 
bed first? You look pretty white. 1 
mustn't lot you tire yourself. You sec 
I am a pretty good nurse now', and I 
know how to lake care of people.” 

“No. I am fine." said Jack: “my 
shoulder is nearly well again. 1 have 
had two month.3 in the hoospilal w’ith 
it. and 1 want to tell you all about 


PAINTED 

FIRES 


— nv — 

NCLLIE L. McCLUNQ 


there the blue-iinifoi med French 
oflicer. darting Ihrouglv. the crowd 
like a gorgeou.s bluebird. | 

They are removing men on stretch-; 
ers now. and the V.A.D.’s arc busy.. 
Very skilfully they manage loo roll I 
(he bedca.scs to the stretchers and' 
carry them to the waiting am^ilances 

pallid laces, all of them, some 
bandaged, but most of them smiling 
bravely, too. and glad to be home. 

There is one V.A.D. looking very 
slim in her blue .serge uniform who 
works feverishly. She is returning 
with an empty when she meets the 
w'alking cases coming out of their 
coach, some pn crulchoa. some being 
iiolped by companions, arms in slings, 
bandaged faces, but all on their feet. 

She stop.s with a cry of gladness. 
Jack, oh, Jack!" she cries, as a 
}()ung man w'ith his arm in a sling 
is pa.'ising “Jack it's Kva don’t you 
know me?” 

She threw lier arms around him. 
“It’s my only brother my onlj | 
Irolher.^ she says to her companions, 
who wait for her. “Jack, are you a 
ho.spital case, or can you come vvltti 
me? 1 liave a flat. I can put you up. 
All right, wait for me inside on the 
first bench I’ll be through in half 
an hour.” 

Jack sat on the bench inside 
watching the crow'ds endlessly mil¬ 
ling around him. He was surprired to 
meet iiis sister here when he believed 
her to be safe in Winnipeg. He won¬ 
dered what had brought her to Lon¬ 
don Eva. tho luxury-loving, indolent 
Eva. It was strange to see her in 
p’ain uniform, carrying stretchers. 
But there w’a.s a high look on her face 
i that iransforraod her. She looked 
more like the k^va he had known long 
■ ago. 

Eva came for him at last and led 
him to tho rear of the grout station. 

, where endles.i cars w’ore parked, and 
put him into one which socmed very 
small and low. 

“Wo pay a license according to 
; wheel base, you know," she laughed; 
“and anyway, a car is a car. no mat¬ 
ter how small it is. Oh, Jack, it’s 
good to sec you. and I have a bed 
, ready for you. I’ve kept lots of the 
boys I’ve been here six months.” 

Eva brought him to ln,T flat in 
Maida Vale, and switched on a light, 
leveuled a luxurious llving-roorii, all 
in black and silver. 

I “Do you like it. Jack?” ilie asked 
: with evident pride. ”1 w-onc all day 
' in misery and horrors so I have to 
have beauty at night. 

A large bla( k velvet divan, with 
round black cushions occupied one 
side of the room, the rug was black 
with a faint silver border the fire- 


<' H A r »T I*:K X XX. Cont ilixied 


Ancient Copper Mine 


■ line arc Helini’:' letters.” at 
hng'li .-aid Warner; “lliry belong to 
you now They w'ill tell you every¬ 
thing If we both get (»vcr I w’ili 
take them liark. after you have read 
Ihnn I thtuk If I had had a wife like 
Helnii I would toi hsve doubted her. 

I don’t thbik I wouM. However I am 
not saying that to buii you no one 
knows what he vvouki do. Anj’way 
1 am glad I met you. .I;u And your 
wife IS \vi-p and so l.s little Lili. 

“.\n<l .NO you M'e you must get 
through. I may. but you must, and 
if you do you will tell Helini. Come 
un our chaai-c ih jukI hh good now 
as it ever will l)c ‘ 

Jack took his innrl and pressed it. 
“Arthur. 1 can’t tell you what I want 
to say you have been a hotter friend 
to Helnil Ihnn I have.” 

The bridge was a line iron one, 
with heavily studded fiitlars. Every 
second light was huining. Tho road 
leading to It was not much travclh'd. 
and an tlvy walked up tho long up- 
piouch their feet made a strange 
echoing sound. Tliey liad left their 
lilue overcoa’s open, showing the gray 
German latiocU'-'. .lack knew' what he 
%vas to :ay In (Jerman if accosted, 
but ih-'u hope was that no one wai 
on Ih'' biiilge. Every step brought 
them nenm. and tin* ligtits ahead of 
tliein on tiie IJoliand side twinkled 
like the lights at home. 

Jach’s heart wac in a jiliangc tur¬ 
moil over what he had heard. . . . 
On, on they weic lialf-way over 
now step I eclioing. echoing . .' 

no sound hut the gentle murmuring.^ 
from tho other side, gentle sounds 
. . ‘do'^s barking . co\v-b?lls 
they must hiiiry .... on. 
on . ten feel fi(»ri the end now! 

Suddenly from lichind the last pil¬ 
lar stepped out a (lerman guard, who 
IhriiHt H flashlight in Uielr faces, 
blinding them with its sudden gleam. 
At the en«l of hi.s rifle a bayonet 
gleumed in the light. 

“Ibdl!“ he cried 

“Why do you halt lus? \Vc are 
honest men.” saiu Arthur imietl^'. 

“Give iiu‘ your pus.sporls, then,” 
said the guard, putting awa^’ his 
lla.shlight. iiut not lowering his rifle. 

Bictcndiiig to scarcii his pockets. 
Arthur moved a little, then like a 
tiger lie ipiang im the guard, grasp¬ 
ing iiim around the neck. 

“i ll linld him. Jack! ” he shouted. 
“Heal it! you’re Hale! Beet U!“ 

Jack found refuge in the trees on 
the other hank There was a qviecr 
Binging in his head, something dron¬ 
ing like a swarni of bees. Then came 
a sudden jiain in his siiuulder like a 


Keiiiurkahle Find Ih Reported On Isle 
Ro>ale In MIrliigaii ^ 

An ancient copper mine, eighty 
feet long and hidden 30 feet or more 
beneath a ledge copper bearing ■ 
rock has been unearthed near Hay 
Bay. on the southern edge of Isle 
Boyale, by archaeologists exploring 
tho island. Dr. George West. Mil¬ 
waukee scientist, wdlh the expedition, 
advanced the theory that some early 
tribe of Indians, perhap.s a thousand 
years ago dug from the copper veins 
the ore that was precious to them 
for tokens for lance heads, arrow 
points and ornaments. 


w'hlch are not merely useful 
but are also an asset to your appear¬ 
ance, if rightly cared tor. 


cam 


Jack began wilh his meeting with 
Helnii at Eagle Mines; their mar¬ 
riage by the inaglslralc; the magis¬ 
trate’s objections, and his showing of 
the newspaper report. 

(To Be (Continued. I 


neiiiaiid For Irrigated Land 
Evidence of tho demand for irri¬ 
gated land in Southern Alberta is the 
fact that the Canada Land and Irri¬ 
gation Company find it necessary to 
open up another unit of the Vauxhall 
project to meet tho demand, a step it 
was not planned to take until 1930. 


Would Solve Anastasia Puzzle 


Noted litstor.'an Reliexes lie Has 
Solution Of I'oiitroversy 
Dr. Edward A. Walsh, S.J., vice- 
president of Georgetown University 
and u noted historian, believes he has 
in his possssion a documentcal solu¬ 
tion to the Grand Duchess Anastasia 
controversy. 

Whether it will uphold the woman 
now In the United States, under the 
protection of William B. Leeds. Jr., 
and known as Madame Tchaikovsky 
as a true daughter of the lute Czar 
Nicholas of Bussia. or brand her as 
an imposter. Dr. Walsh will not spec¬ 
ulate. 

lie is certain the mass of docu¬ 
ments and records which he recently 
brought to this country from Europe, 
will settle, at least In his own mind 
whether or not the Grand Duchess 
escaped the massacre of the Imper¬ 
ial Russian family 10 year.-< ago. 

For the past seven years, tlu* Je.s- 
uit priest has been conducting a his- 
toiiun’s investigation into (he facts 
surrounding tiu* deaths of Czar Nich¬ 
olas and his immediate family. Ilia 
studies have (urried him to Kussia, 
Belgium. France. Austria. Switzer¬ 
land, England and Itaiy. 


Newsprint l*rodiie(ioii 
Newsprint paper has formed over 
80 per cent, of the total production of 
Canadian paper-mills since 1917. In 
1920 it was S3.4 per cent. 


It's pretty safe to judge bank cash 
ieis by their disappeurances, 


It May Be 


“But let us. who arc of the day. be 
.sobi*. |‘u‘ 

faith and love: and for an helmet, the 
hope of salvation.” 1 Thessuloniuns 


I wake this morn, an I all my life 
Is freshly mine lo live; 

Tho future with sweet promise lilo. 
And crowns of joy to give. 

New words lo speak, nc'.v thouahls lo 
hear. 

New love to give and lake; 
Perchance new liurdens 1 niav I'ear 
For love’s own sw’eetest sake. 

Every day that is born Into tho 
worl 1 comes like a imrst of naisii, 
anc* rings itself all the day tluough; 
and thou shall make o." it a dunce, 
a dirge, or a life niaicli as thou will. 

Thoma •- C.irlylc. 


FIRESTONE 
WICK TEST 


The jar at left is filled with 
Gum-Dipping solution. The 
other jar is empty at first. One 
end wick—made of 

cords used in Firestone tire:— 
IS placed in the solution, the 
other in the empty jar. Solu¬ 
tion penetrates entire length of 
the cord wick showing that 
Gum-Dipping saturates the 
cords. 

This exclusive Firestone pro¬ 
cess insulates evgry fibre with 
rubber, reduces internal friction 
and gives thousands of extra 
miles. Firestone tires cost no 
more than ordinary tires. Your 
local Firestone Dealer will glad¬ 
ly serve you, and save# you 
money. 

riRSSTONE TIRE b RUBBER CO. 
OP CANADA LIMITED 
Hamiltoa, Ontario 
Alosl Allies Per Dollar 


Manitoba Old Age Pensions 


When your 


Millard’s LInimeni for Blistmai I'fct 


I'ciisioji .\( t Hum Now ( otni> Into 
Opi'nitioii III Pi'oxtiK'c 

The Manitoba Government Iuih by 
Order-in-Cuuncil brought into effect 
the Old Age Pension Act, passed ni 
the last hCHsion of the ]>rovincial leg¬ 
islature. Beginnuig on September 1. 
pensioners whose applications have 
been approved by the Manitoba 
Workmen’s Compensation Board will 
receive llie stijilatcd pension of $20 
a month. 

It is reported that 3,000 persons 
have already made application for a 
pension. Effort will be made to re¬ 
view lliese during the next month to 
determine the exact number eligible. 

Under the terms of federal old age 
pensions legislation half the cost will 
be ix)i«e by the Dominion Govern¬ 
ment. while the province will meet 
the remaining outlay. It is estimated 
that $300,000 will be required for tho 
initial levy. 

All *p^'isons who have attained 70 
years and have resided in Canada 
for 20 years and five in Manltobu 
qualify for a jx nsion. 


Prosperous Indication 


And have a clear, fresh complexion, 
free from pimples, redness or rough¬ 
ness. Clogging and irritation of the 
jxires, the usual cause of pimples, may 
be prevented by making Cuticura Soap 
your every-day toilet soap, assisted by 
Cuticura Ointment when required. 

«*n>pU iMk Fim by M^l. A<UraM ( an^ian D»PO‘: 
“ItaaboaM, LU , Maalttal." i'nca. Suap iLc. Ointnaat 
ataadW)*- 'I alr uiii lijf. - . , 

Cuticura Skavinv Stick ZSc. 


Nearly 0,000,000 bicycle rUlers 
in the British Isles this season. 


Builds the Only 

GUM-DIPPED TIREB 


The “military pace" is ret Uoned at 
tw’o feet six Inches. 


Minurd’H Liiiiiimetit—>tbe L’liiverHul 
remedy. 









THE RAYMOND RKCORi^cR 
IHTld C. Petenon 
Rdltor and Proprietor 
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY 
Raymond'a Sole Adrertlnlna and 
Newa^ Medium 

RAYMOND — — alberta 

Subscription Rates 

Canada, per year $2.00 

Bit months 1100 

V R. Points, per year $2.rf 

81i months II Sf 

Advert.elno rata card on appMcotion 


iRST Aid 


Get our prices on 

Groceries and Meats 

Phone 17 

F. T. Holt’s Market 


is a Bank of Montreal chccjuing 
•account which may be opened at any 
of our offices. 


Notice to Creditors 
and Claimants 


The balance require¬ 
ments of such accounts 
are moderate while de¬ 
positors arc entitled to 
the full benefit of our 
service. 


IN TTTK KSTATK OK l AMKH 
VANCK, CATK OK THK TOWN 
OK UAYMONn. IN THK IMU) 
VINC^E OK ALHKHTA. KAHM- 
KH. DKCKASKI) 

NOTICK IS HKIIKHV OIV» 
KN tluit all |MMsni)K Imvin^ a 
rlaiiM tlio Knlato of the ahove 

named -fann's V;iin‘<* win* «li«Ml on 
the 7th (lay (*t' Au^'iist. A. !>., I!*li I. 
arc n'nnircd t«» file with tin’ Ad* 
minisl rator, • Hritisli (Canadian 
'IVuMt Company, Lethhridffc, Al- 
hcita, hy the firat day of Octoher. 
A I).. 1M2K. a full statement duly 
veiifird f*f their clhims and of .any 
Hccnrity held hy them, and that 
after that tinn* the A<lministrator 
will distrihnte the asHclH of the 
|)ooeafk(*(l anuni^ tlie parti(*R «*ntitl- 
cd theri'to havin^^ rof^ard (*nly l(* 
the claims of which notic«' has 
hcen so filed qi* which have heen 
hron»<ht to t heir knowled^^j*. 

OATKH this I Ith day of An^^- 
UHt. A I).. l'd2S. 

OHTM'Nl) and CI.AUKE, 
I Holicitors for the AdmiiiiRtrator, 
BritiRh Canadian Tniflt Com- 
j panj% Lethbridge. Alberta. 


Cash Coupons 

With 

Every Purchase 

PHONE 81 

Piep^rass Meat Market 




Maple Leaf Bread is Your Bes 

Eat More ot It 

Sec <njr w indow.s lor a kill line o\ 


Established i8l7 

ASSETS IN EXCESS OP 


REzmdft'd BrsncKt C. C. WATSON. Ma 


nager 


Fancy Confectionery Fresh Daily 


Maple Leaf Bakery 

PHONE 38 


News Notes 


News Notes 


Convicted of keeping li(pior for 
sale. Fred HreRler, of Spring Cou¬ 
lee, wan lined with eoBts, by 

.Magistrate •!. W. Low at Mngratli. 
He was fnrtber fined l?2t) witli 
coRts for purchasing li(pior on a 
permit other than'lii.s own. Carl 
Siiidleg(‘i. whoHO permit Hresler 
used. waR lined 82n. with coHts, for 
allowing a person to purchase 
liijuor on Ins permit. 


Billie Meeks won sixth place in 
tlie calf club contest at the Leth¬ 
bridge exhibition. 


The Cardston hasehall nine cap¬ 
tured the southern Alberta cliam- 
pionship by defeating Medicine 
Hat ill two games, 5—2 and 5—0. 
This gave them the right to meet 
CarBtairs, northern champ.s. 


G. W. LEECH, M. D., C. M 

PHYSICIAN and SrUOEON 


Harvest Time 

is almost here 

Don^t let your ripened crop f 

you unprepared 


Z. \V. Jacobs, Cardston barrister, 
has been appointed to the Alberta 
Stake Presidency, suoceeding J. 
F'. Parrish, who is locating in 
U tall. 


Office over Postottice 
Hoiirfl: n.3t)—I2.*3U. 3.3U 

Or hy appointment 
OHice and llesidemu* Phones 


Thirty Welsli harvesters arriv¬ 
ed at Magrath last week direct 
from the old country. 


Dominion of Canada 
MAIL CONTRACT 


DR. 1 1 HARCOUR T HEAL 

DENTAL SURGEON 


Coleman Journal: Tln^ list of 
names of those wlio passed their 
school examinations, recently puh- 
lislied in the daily newspapers, 
doubtless mn<le many di//y. One 
would tliink that a less ciimher- 
soine system could he usecl where-j 
hy tlie names could hi* iistc(| in 
districts, instead of every newspa¬ 
per publishing the complete list in 
order to he sure of giving complete 
results. Not only in Alberta has 
this been tlie cause for comment, 
hut ill Saskatchewan the same 
inetluMl has iieen in force, and the 
same complaints liave been made. 
It seems that tlio dailies will have 
to make plain to the department 
responsible, the advantage (hat 
would accrue in pnhlisliing the 
list in districts instead of issuing a 

I 

I hodgepodge list of the entire 
province The dailies are far too 
generous in standing the expense 
of paying linotype operators, proof 
: readers and columiiH of space, a 
largo proportion of which is use¬ 
less. 


In Haymond on Moiidaj’. \Yed 
m^sday and Salnrdaj' of (*acli week 

— OHice Hours— 

H 12.3D 1.3(1—ti 


SEALED TENDERS, addres¬ 
sed to the Postmaster General, 
will be received at Ottawa until 
noon, on Fridaj% the 2fith of Sep¬ 
tember, 1D28, for the conveyance 
of His Majesty’s Mails on a pro¬ 
posed Contract for a period not ex¬ 
ceeding four years twice per week 
on the route, RAYMOND RUR¬ 
AL UOUTF^ NO. 1 proposed. 
From tlie Postmaster General's 
pleasure. 

Printed mitices containing furth¬ 
er inforuiution as to conditions of 
proposed Contract may be seen 
ami lilank forms of Tender may be 
obtf^inod at the Post Oflice of 
Raymond and at the office of the 
District Hui^erinteiident of Postal 
Service, Calgary, Alberta. 
DISTHICT SUPERINTE N D- 
ENTS OFFICE. Calgary,^ Al¬ 
berta. 15lli of August 1928. 

J. B. Corley, 

District Superintendent 
of Postal Service. 


Good Harvesting Machines 

are essential for 

Economical Harvesting 


Phone 5") 


Drayingl 

<\c GENERAL TRANSFER 

Prompt Attention Given 
to All Work 

MODERATE PRICES 

Horses for Sale 


FOUNI)—Diamond Ring. Own 
er may recover same upon apply 
ing to Mrs. I.B. Uolierts, Raymond 


Mr. and Mrs. Archie Cliadliurn 
and six children arrived here last 
week from Houtliern l.’tali with a 
view to purchasing land and mak¬ 
ing their homo here Mr. Chad- 
burn is a hrotlier-in-law to K. T. 
Holt. .Mr. Holt is also enjoying a 
visit from his father, V. O. Holt. 


Raymond 


Station 


J. D. HALL 

Farm Implements 


Dean Lamb 

Phone 65 or 11 


In spite of rain and bad roads 
last Saturday and Sunday fair at¬ 
tendances were recorded at con¬ 
ference. Apostle Melviji J. Bal¬ 
lard of Salt Jjake City was the 
principal speaker. 


Makers of 

Distinctive Portraits 

Be photographed by 


Phone 32 

Geo. Ralph 


Phone 33 

Fred Ralph 


MAKING A RECORD IN LOADING GRAIN 


Allison 


Studio: Balmoral Block 
ifth St. S. ^ Lethbridge 
Thotographs Live Forever” 

Expert Film Developin>i 

Leave your rolls with our jigent: 

The RaymoipJ Pharmacy 


-•••I 


Marcelling 50c 
j Hennas a Specialty | 

I 

Mrs. Mattie Tittsworth 




RALPH 


ni •haiiu'ti‘ 1 , till tHii'.'lt • 

|)loyi'd ut (he saiiie time. These 
Bpoti'H run fruin lonUing hiud, into 
whi< h gi'uin in 'iropped after being 
web Ued at the top of the elevator in 
four hopper scales, each with u 
cupn'dty of 2,500 busheU. Uruiu is 
broui^ht to the scules in four elevating 
legs from the bottom of the “work- 
houfi«'/* where it is conveyed on belts 
from the storage bins. This rate of 
shijtping means over 75,000 bushels 
per hour, equivalent lo loading a car¬ 
load cf grain every minute. 

Tht United Grain Growers’ elevator 
shown in the picture, which was placed 
in set ^'ie• during the past crop year, 


The upidity with which grain can 
l)c bundled at a terminal elevator 
when the best and latest methods and 
maebitiery are tMiiployed was illus¬ 
trated the other day at Port Arthur, 
Unlurio, at the new eluvutor of 
United Grain Growers Limited. With¬ 
in a time of hovgu hours and twenty 
minutes 550,000 bushels of wlu*ut were 
loaded into the 8.B. Lo Moyne, l*roak 
ing all ])reviou8 records. The fastest 
time previously made with a ('argo of 
this sire has been eight hours and 
thirty minutes. 

'v 

The elevator is cquinped with four 
loading spouts, each fourteen inches 


Jias n capacity of 5,500,UUU bushels 
Now features of design were in 
eorporated in its structure, and it was 
planned and equipped to provide for 
tbo most rapid ami cITicient possible 
haudling of grain. The loading above 
referred to was ai:com])lishcd in the 
ordinary course of business without 
any special preparations designed for 
making u record. 

The 6.8. Le Moyne belongs to the 
fleet of the Canada Steamship Linos, 
and is the largest vessel on the Great 
Lakes. She is 613 feet long, with a 
beam of 70 Feet, while she draws up 
to 29 feet of water when fully loaded. 


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